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Continental is recalling Pilots

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Dav8tor

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 29, 2002
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131



By Aaron Smith, CNNMoney.com staff writerMay 19, 2010: 2:21 PM ET


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Continental Airlines is recalling some of the pilots it furloughed several years ago, as the company ramps up international flights and replaces retiring older pilots.
Continental (CAL, Fortune 500) spokeswoman Julie King said the airline is recalling 15 of the 147 pilots it furloughed in 2008. In addition, it is putting more than 100 pilots back on active status from the voluntary leaves of absence that they took in 2008.
Some of these pilots will be flying the company's two recently acquired Boeing 777s, which will be used for international flights, King said.
Continental furloughed the pilots during a particularly tough year for the airline industry, which has struggled to cope with stagnant business and vacation travel thanks to the recession, as well as volatile fuel prices.
"We are pleased to see our pilots returning," said Capt. Jay Pierce, a Continental pilot and a chairman for the Continental chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association. "With the anticipated delivery of new aircraft, the improvements in the economy and the expectations for increased passenger travel during the upcoming summer vacation season, the return of our furloughed pilots -- all of them -- is needed to maintain the level of service that Continental is known for."
Hunter Keay, senior airline analyst for Stifel Nicolaus & Co., said the recall is a small but positive sign for the airline industry.
"Clearly, the industry is recovering, but I think certain regions are performing better than others, and certain airlines are outperforming others," said Keay. "I think that's a bullish indicator for the demand that Continental sees in its core markets."
The recall is occurring as Continental prepares to merge with UAL Corp.'s United Airlines.
0:00 /1:25What travelers think about airline mergers
UAL Corp. (UAUA, Fortune 500) announced on May 3 that United will merge with Continental in a deal worth $3.2 billion, creating the world's largest airline.
The combined company, which will fly under the United moniker and Continental logo, will be larger than Delta Air Lines (DAL, Fortune 500), which became the country's largest airline when it merged with Northwest Airlines in 2008.
Helane Becker, airline analyst for Jesup & Lamont Securities Corp., said the airlines pledged that they would not lay off pilots as part of the merger.
She cast Continental's pilot recall as a sign that the airline recognized that its latest staff cuts were "more muscle than fat."
 
the tale of the tape

(getting killed by the dhc-8Q400)
737 CA Total 19 Vacancies (13 retirements projected)
737 FO Total (45) Reductions

projected active bid bid
retirement pilots* min max
System CA Total 22 1,789 1,831 1,831 42 Vacancies
System FO Total 2 2,308 2,281 2,281 (27) Reductions
System All Total 24 4,097 4,112 4,112 15 Vacancies


* - Active Pilots are those pilots bidding on the this system bid who are not on long term absences and are not projected to retire prior to May 1, 2011


These numbers are soooo light! almost bogus! I think CAL had 4700 ACTIVE before all the reductions started in 2008. Mind you this is a 1 yr plan (ending 05/2011)... they only are accounting for 24 retirements in that year!! How many has CAL actually lost in just the last 6 mos??? I think they only planned system wide for 2 or something ridiculous. Head count is way down and dropping even on this bid, by way under-counting/planning!!!
 
Why do they say "several years ago" Its only been two??
 
They're not hiring though; they want to hold off till after the UAL merger if they can.

There is no way CAL will make it till the merger is complete without hiring more pilots. The big question will be who would want to start working here knowing that 1400+ furloughed pilots will be placed in front of them when the merger is complete?

Maybe you will see an loa offering the slots to UAL furloughs............Maybe not.
 
There is no way CAL will make it till the merger is complete without hiring more pilots. The big question will be who would want to start working here knowing that 1400+ furloughed pilots will be placed in front of them when the merger is complete?

Maybe you will see an loa offering the slots to UAL furloughs............Maybe not.

Probably people that don't believe 1400 furloughed pilots would be placed senior to a working pilot.
 
If you are hired after the "snapshot" of both seniority lists was taken, all furloughed pilots are already on the list. This would lead to furloughed pilots to be placed ahead of a newhire. Since this would happen, I don't really see why anyone would want to go to CO if they begin to hire. Thats why it seems to be a logical reason to bring in furloughed U guys. This comes from the union out of the concerns it is creating.
 

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