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CommutAir and ALPA?

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SO let me get this straight. CAL ALPA allowed CA to almost double in size. Allowed the Express pilots to have jobs and the CA guys to upgrade and then they vote down ALPA?

What the hell is that all about?
 
That's what we're trying to figure out. Looks like another group of pilots who don't give a crap about anyone else but themselves.
 
MJG said:
That's what we're trying to figure out. Looks like another group of pilots who don't give a crap about anyone else but themselves.

Easy there, big fella. 42% of us do give a crap about the bigger picture, and I hope you'll remember that before shooting all of us dirty looks. A lot of us worked very hard on this campaign, and are every bit as disappointed as you that it didn't work out as we had hoped. Many of us realize that joining ALPA would have been advantageous to both pilot groups.

And remember that many of those "no" votes came from the furloughed pilots from your company that now have jobs here thanks to ALPA. (A group of the furloughees just upgraded here, for heaven's sake!) Yes, I'm as baffled by the results as you are. Stunned, really.

To my co-workers who voted "no": You've officially given up your right to b*tch about anything at the company for the next 12 months, which is how long we'll have to wait if we want to try this again. You had your chance to work to make things better, and you've officially told management that you're happy with whatever they give you. You made your bed, now you get to sleep in it. Enjoy flying the bigger planes for the same 1989 Beech payscale.

To those that voted "yes": Thanks for giving a hoot. I hope we'll be able to try this again.

To those that didn't vote at all: That means you voted "No." There wasn't an option not to vote -- if you didn't call, it was a "no" vote. Hope you're comfortable with that.

Thanks to all parties for their patience.
 
Kudos CA1900

It is sad that those who did not vote at all, lowered the bar for professional pilots everywhere.

The race to the bottom continues.

To those who vote yes and who were on the committe, I hope that ALPA national took note of who did it and those who worked in the shadows to make a vote possible.

Read the CALEX Formus. It very intresting.


I like what one pilot said, "... I did not receive a paper ballot, only a letter that had a phone number and code on it. The only proof that I have saying I voted was the time and day that I wrote on it."

YEAH, ......... RIGHT. That guy did not vote, he's only trying to cover his ass.

Yeah, and OJ is innocent and Clinton never cheated,
Give me a break !
 
CA1900,

You are correct, there were 65 of you who do give a crap about the future and for that I am grateful. Unfortunately you and the other 64 pilots that voted yes will be held "guilty by association". It's not fair and it's not professional. I will be the first to admit that. I certainly don't condone it but I can't stop it from happening either. But that's life, especially these days in the light of what MESA did for our industry. I can only hope that all ALPA pilots still treat you guys and gals the same as they did before the failed organizing campaign but I'm afraid we all know that won't happen. This thing has really rubbed many of my fellow pilots at XJET the wrong way and to know that there may very well have been furloughed XJET pilots working at CommutAir who voted no or didn't bother to vote, just adds fuel to the fire.

The only thing we can all do at this point is move on.
 
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....So, how did ALPA help them? They have union representation, and they signed a less than good contract. Why did ALPA let them do that? How could ALPA have helped Commutair? And, can ALPA truly help any regional airline?
 
Insatiable said:
....So, how did ALPA help them? They have union representation, and they signed a less than good contract. Why did ALPA let them do that? How could ALPA have helped Commutair? And, can ALPA truly help any regional airline?

Because, believe it or not, their previous contract was so bad that this P.O.S. deal they just signed really was an improvement for them in many areas, most of all in their scope language. Problem is that many of the gains they made are about the same, maybe just slightly more, than what most of us have already via our current 5-7 year old C.B.A. s. So as far as raising the bar for the rest of us, well..........

ALPA let them do that because for THEM it was a decent deal. They were all bent over a table about to be J.O.'s Biatch via "Freedumb Air" if they didn't work something out. Their agreement ended "Freedumb Air" and restored C.C. Air pilots to their rightful place in the MESA system. So it was a win for them in several areas. A win for them not for the rest of us.

ALPA could have helped CommutAir in many ways, more than I can list. For example, if said CommutAir pilot balls one up at the end of a runway some day, he/she is pretty much on their own when it comes to defending their pilot certificate and their livelihood. Not to mention if a pax decided to sue the pilot for whatever they could. Also their management could decide tommorrow to furlough half the pilots over there to the street, that basically already happened a couple years back. There's not much their pilots could do about it. Not saying ALPA is the cure for everything but it's sure nice to have big brother in your corner when the times get tough.

Can ALPA truely help any "regional" airline you ask. Well ask any Eagle pilot about the grievance they just won that restored some of their pilots to the left seat. And when Comair pilots were forced to walk the picket lines it was ALPA who provided nearly $1400 a month in strike benefits to their pilots. It was ALPA that restored 2 PAN AM J-31 pilots to their jobs after they had been fired for refusing to violate FAR duty time limits. So you tell me. I could go on and on.

Like I said ALPA is not the cure for everything, but eventually every pilot group gets tired of getting their teeth kidked in on a regular basis. That being the case, I'll take ALPA any day over the alternative: Nothing.
 
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I used to work at CommutAir a few years back and unless things have changed quite a bit, it was a great place to work! I've been with a number of companies and they treated me better than any other. CommutAir was the only non-union company I've worked for.

I've read some statements on this board that are inconsistent with my experience there. Perhaps things have changed since I left, but I'll share a few observations with you and those that are currently there can judge.

- A good friend had an altitude bust while operating as FO there. He and the captain where defended by the company's attorney at the company's expense.
-I was investigated for a potential violatation relating to deicing. I later learned that the DO took a strong stand against the FAA and LOI was dropped.
-When I had a family problem at home, I was told to go home, take care of my family, and return when I was ready, at full pay.
-When I told the DO my first child was due a month in advance, she told me the company would do whatever it took to get me there, if it should happen while I was on the road. She even said they would fly an empty plane back to Plattsburgh if necessary.
-I wasn't there when they furloughed, but it was my understanding that they held several job fairs and helped many of the guys get jobs. I've never heard of that happening anywhere although I think some unions did buy their guys arinc memberships.

I know pay is an issue but there are certain economic realities. When the ecomomy was good, we were making real good money with overtime and profit share. Some of the guys were making $80K for flying a 19 seater! As far as the ESOP problem, I'm not happy with that but then again, as a former United employee, I was forced to liquidate my UAL ESOP this week as a result of some bankruptcy law. It was once valued at $40k but I was forced to sell it and got about $227!

I also have a hard time buying the argument that CommutAir's growth can be credited to ALPA! I'm out of the loop on this one but correct me if I'm wrong. COEX wants to get rid of their 19 seaters so they've subcontracted CommutAir to handle the smaller markets that wouldn't be profitable for an RJ. It's win-win for both companies. ALPA allowed the deal to go through but they didn't create the deal. Nor would it cost them any jobs as COEX was getting rid of those routes. ALPA did a great job at protecting the jobs of the furloughed guys with this program though. I thought everyone at CommutAir would be real happy to be at a company that's growing while most others are in retrenchment! Upgrades in under a year is virtually unheard of now adays.

So what's my point? I never fealt like there was a need for a union there because I was treated well and payed commensurate to other 19 seaters. I'm a strong supporter of unions when they are necessary and a staunch supporter of the union at my current job. Without the union, I wouldn't stay here. There are so many scheduling and safety issues that would go unaddressed in the absence of our union. They recently saved 100 jobs when the company threatened to needlessly furlough these guys.

Unions are great when needed but sometimes can ruin a good thing when not needed. Just my opinion...blast away!
 
UPSFO said:
I used to work at CommutAir a few years back and unless things have changed quite a bit, it was a great place to work!

I'll keep it brief and just say "Yes," things have changed quite a bit. Schedules are awful. There is no overtime POSSIBLE -- you're hard-pressed to get your 16 days to add up to the minimum (around 64-69 hours). All the domiciles except three closed (although we've now added CLE). Profit sharing has been nonexistent for years.

It's still a fun job, but it's not the company you left. Not by a long shot.

As for why we wanted the union, I'll just say this: Pay was way down on the list of things we wanted changed. Most of the changes we wanted related to scheduling's carte blanche to screw with our lives, and all the unpaid work (deadheading, etc.) that we do. Seniority is regularly disregarded during the bidding process. The biggest change we sought was to have people paid by years at the company, not years in seat -- we have fourth-year guys and first-year guys paid only $1.20 apart.

Thankfully safety issues have never been a concern; the company's always been terrific in that regard.

But as I said, it's not the same place you left. A union wasn't necessary then -- it really IS now. I wish that weren't the case, but it really is.

Thanks for taking an interest. Hopefully we can try again next year if we're still around.
 
That's what we're trying to figure out. Looks like another group of pilots who don't give a crap about anyone else but themselves.


How was this vote about anyone other than Commutair? How does it affect anyone else?

I was a supporter of the effort here, and am disappointed that it didn't happen. But I fail to see how our own internal issues are anyone elses business.

And don't give me this crap about ALPA being a 'brotherhood' of pilots. There is so much internal bickering within ALPA it is crazy. I don't see a big warm happy family at USAirways (mainline vs whollyowned - whollyowned vs. non whollyowned - everyone vs Mesa). I don't see one at Delta either (RJDC) And now the United family is starting to talk about jets for jobs. Where is the harmony and caring about everyone else?

And if you fly an RJ, don't even dare talk about "raising the bar". Tell me this - how is pulling a 737 off a route, furloughing the crew, and then paying an RJ crew a third of the 737 crew to fly the same route "raising the standard"? The RJ is the single greatest threat to pilots income and lifestyle the industry has ever seen. Yet every RJ pilot who belongs to ALPA thinks they are raising the bar. I can introduce you to thousands of furloughed mainline pilots who would argue with you. Just because you got your foot in the door doesn't mean you are helping. If you took an RJ job for anything less than major airline pay, you are guilty of lowering the standard of this industry. Just because you are fighting for higher pay now doesn't mean anything, you have already done the damage.

This vote was about CommutAir and CommutAir only. And obviously a majority of CommutAir pilots didn't feel ALPA could help them. It is disappointing for those of us who wanted it. But please do not make this out to be anything more than what it was. CommutAir not voting in ALPA is not going to affect the industry. Flying an RJ around for less than major airline pay has done far more damage to the piloting profession than the CommutAir pilot group could ever come close to doing by not voting in ALPA.
 
Hey if the CA guys want to stay non union thats fine and dandy with me. The thing that puts a hair across my a$$ is that one of the main reasons it failed was because some of our pilots spearheaded the campaign against ALPA.


The same ALPA that negotiated jobs for them in the first place. The same ALPA that facilitated the expansion of CA into the CLE market. Had CA not expanded then I doubt there would have been as much growth over the last year.

I hope the union brings Article VIII charges against them for their actions.

My point is that since CA is doing flying that was previously done by our pilots in our airplanes it would be nice to be able to sit down with representitives of the CA pilot group and work out a common strategy to bennefit everyone. Now we, and CA are just CAL's beotch with no way to work together for a common goal.
 
mckpickle said:
The same ALPA that negotiated jobs for them in the first place. The same ALPA that facilitated the expansion of CA into the CLE market. Had CA not expanded then I doubt there would have been as much growth over the last year.

The same ALPA who also negotiated that when the furloughed pilots (including the Commutair XJT pilots) came back to XJT, they would not incur the required 6 month waiting period prior to receiving health benefits. The same ALPA who paid for medical benefits for some of those Commutair guys while they were on furlough prior to their going over to Commutair. Yep...it stings....get them jobs...double the size of the airline...make them all Captains in 6-12 months...yep...sweet, thanks CAL ALPA furloughed CA pilots.

GJ
 
NEDude said:
How was this vote about anyone other than Commutair? How does it affect anyone else?

Because it says to all other airline management teams that here is a group of pilots who are willing to work without union representation. Who are willing not to complain when we need to cut their pay and their days off so that we as management can continue to make our beloved six figure salaries. Who won't complain when we need to furlough half of them to the street to make ends meet. Who basically will let us do whatever it takes to make our company work. Boy these sure are a special breed of pilots. They must have very flexible lives, unmarried with no families who really don't need an income to live on. Can't wait till our own employee groups walk out on us cause we can just surely hire these types of pilots since there seem to be more and more of them these days.
 

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