General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
- Posts
- 20,442
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Yes they were, but ASA had dumped their 146s prior to their acquisition. The limited number of 146's that ASA flew at the time of POS'96 were the only exemption for that size jet. Naturally, Fins tries to paint a different picture hoping no one would catch on to him, but it's a fact. Long before contract C2K, ASA had stopped flying 146s and they had no plans to go back to flying the 146s that were part of the POS'96 exemption. With no more 146s flying the exemption went away in the next contract.General Lee said:Wasn't ASA flying a BAE 146 back in '96? Did that have 105 seats? Three flight attendants on that thing?
Yes, your side letter of agreement on bid restricted second officers.FDJ2 said:How can ALPA act in accordance with its CBL's when the Delta MEC provided false information to the Board?
Do you have any specific evidence of this allegation of yours? Is ALPA's denial of the PID a violation of its obligation to ASA/CMR pilots? If it is, then why is it not part of the RJDC claim of a failure of fair representation? Hmmm
Wrong, no request has been made for injunctive relief ( although such a claim might be made to stop any immediate harm.FDJ2 said:....leaving them only with a very weak injunctive claim remaining. 3 claims were tossed out for other reasons. The last remaining claim has yet to go through discovery and there is no documentary evidence that it has had any effect on DAL negotiations.
ALPA did, technically, act within its jury-rigged rules in denying the PID. It also acted against your long term interersts, which your leaders of the time weren't smart enough to grasp. However, there was not "seniority grab", attempted or otherwise. That idea is an invention of your MEC (designed to rile you up and effective in doing so).FDJ2 said:ALPA acted in accordance with its C&BLs in its resounding decision when it denied your seniority grab.
It is true that counts were dismissed but not for the reason you indicated. In fact they were only dismissed because the judge decided that they were all covered under the DFR claim and were therefore duplicitous. In other words, he essentially said that the dismissed counts were also DFR claims and would be dealt with under that count. Check the ruling again. Note that the judge also urged conversion to a class action.Weren't 6 out of 10 RJDC claims summarily dismissed before discovery because the judge found that no set of facts could ever support the RJDC claims.
You're correct about that. It is also true that your contract language specifically exempted certain aircraft from your own merger clause. It's no coincidence that they just happened to be the ones that we fly.Of course if you had contract language that requitred a list integration if acquired as a wholly owned this would be a moot point,