AAflyer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 1,493
Skydiverdriver,
That is what I am talking about. Who would have guessed 12-15 years ago when scope clauses and commuter supplements were incorporated into contracts that 10 years later "commuters" would become all jet airlines flying coast to coast and anywhere in between.
The sad fact of all this, we are fighting each other. RJDC wants a fair shake and a chance to grow, mainliners want to preserve their routes (yes, I have been on both sides). This is summary. I am sure both sides could expand and expalin much more to wieght their sides, and I am not here to argue that.
I find irony in the way many of the reigonal pilots have been treated, and looked upon as inferior, yet now mainliners would be more than happy to fly those jets (rjs) at "regional" pay and working conditions.
Looking at the pay of the quasi-majors (my new term) ie. Comair,Eagle etc, there should be a way to bring up the pay even more to be more inline with the majors (atleast on a weighted basis) and bring these companies together. Only then would you have both groups truly represented by a union, both pilot groups truly working towards a plan that benefits the whole.
We are in slump, but when the going was good we were paid our high mainline rates and the companies still made billions in revenue and in some cases profits. The quasi-majors are making money, and could still afford to pay more.
Please do not take these comments as greedy, but merely what we are ALL worth. Any management team would like nothing more in the end to fly jets of all sizes paying little in wages. Regardless what you fly (EMB-120 to a 777) you are worth what you negiotate.
AAflyer
That is what I am talking about. Who would have guessed 12-15 years ago when scope clauses and commuter supplements were incorporated into contracts that 10 years later "commuters" would become all jet airlines flying coast to coast and anywhere in between.
The sad fact of all this, we are fighting each other. RJDC wants a fair shake and a chance to grow, mainliners want to preserve their routes (yes, I have been on both sides). This is summary. I am sure both sides could expand and expalin much more to wieght their sides, and I am not here to argue that.
I find irony in the way many of the reigonal pilots have been treated, and looked upon as inferior, yet now mainliners would be more than happy to fly those jets (rjs) at "regional" pay and working conditions.
Looking at the pay of the quasi-majors (my new term) ie. Comair,Eagle etc, there should be a way to bring up the pay even more to be more inline with the majors (atleast on a weighted basis) and bring these companies together. Only then would you have both groups truly represented by a union, both pilot groups truly working towards a plan that benefits the whole.
We are in slump, but when the going was good we were paid our high mainline rates and the companies still made billions in revenue and in some cases profits. The quasi-majors are making money, and could still afford to pay more.
Please do not take these comments as greedy, but merely what we are ALL worth. Any management team would like nothing more in the end to fly jets of all sizes paying little in wages. Regardless what you fly (EMB-120 to a 777) you are worth what you negiotate.
AAflyer