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I’ve read in several articles that the NWA negotiators are willing to take this to binding arbitration, the Delta side is not.
If true, this leaves little doubt in my mind which side has the most reasonable expectations for seniority list integration.
Watching from the sidelines. Jimbo
I’ve read in several articles that the NWA negotiators are willing to take this to binding arbitration, the Delta side is not.
If true, this leaves little doubt in my mind which side has the most reasonable expectations for seniority list integration.
Watching from the sidelines. Jimbo
Yeah, arbitration works well. Look how it worked for US/AWA. An arbitrated settlement would also probably negate the bennies the company is offering for a early resolution.
I think arbitration gives the NW guys a chance to try and get their plan through without the DL pilots voting on it.
With a negotiated settlement both sides get to vote. Hey, maybe the senior NW guys don't want the rest of their list to be able to vote on it either.
If there has to be a deal and there has to be screwing let's screw the senior guys for a change.
Ya think? <--sarcasm...
"their plan"? Arbitration is NO plan! There is NO control in arbitration. NONE!
The reasons you go to arbitration are:
1. You're afraid your fingerprints will be on the deal...and a group of your pilots will hate you. In some circles it's referred to "Lack-A-Sack Syndrome". If your constituency includes a bunch of sticker-making, mouth-breathing idiots, you don't want to rile them. You don't because you're a wussie.
2. You think an arbitrator will give you nothing worse than what the other side is proposing...and MIGHT just give you your proposal. The causes of this can be many. Perhaps the other side refuses to acknowledge the reasons you have prioritized the way you have.
3. Failure to engage. Outside events can force the issue to an arbitrator if both sides believe they have more time to reach a deal than they actually have.
Maybe you're right. You aren't...but maybe.
Fer sure! <--more sarcasm.
This isn't the first significant decision point/event in either airlines history. Quit giving yourself credit for "been there...done that". You haven't... The senior pilots have been to wars you've only read about. They've lived it.
If you aren't viewing this with a 360-degree horizon, you're buying into the "me! me! me!" attitude you rail against.
This deal is hung up over the futures of the junior pilots. Period.
How bout we take the 3 DL guys and the 3 best guys from NW and lock them in a room with 3 bottles of tequila for a weekend? You're not coming out until the tequila is gone and you have a deal.
I have been here 10 yrs and I have not been part of any arbitrated settlement. In that time, we have had 4 different contracts in 1998, 2002, 2004 and 2007. They have all been negotiated, not arbitrated. In 2007 we had a judge with a gun in his hand affecting our 'strategy'. Since 2007, we have had 3 rounds of contract improvements. All have been negotiated. Is the arbitration track record you are referring to, have anything to do with Red/Green issues? I think so. So far, it has not affected me.
Which industry-leading carrier was it that you work for, again?Except for your substandard pay and work rules, you mean?
Arbitration is NO plan! There is NO control in arbitration. NONE!
The reasons you go to arbitration are:
1. You're afraid your fingerprints will be on the deal...and a group of your pilots will hate you. In some circles it's referred to "Lack-A-Sack Syndrome". If your constituency includes a bunch of sticker-making, mouth-breathing idiots, you don't want to rile them. You don't because you're a wussie.
2. You think an arbitrator will give you nothing worse than what the other side is proposing...and MIGHT just give you your proposal. The causes of this can be many. Perhaps the other side refuses to acknowledge the reasons you have prioritized the way you have.
3. Failure to engage. Outside events can force the issue to an arbitrator if both sides believe they have more time to reach a deal than they actually have.
I'm back to agreeing with Occam. That feels good.
This deal is hung up over the futures of the junior pilots. Period.
Occam:
Excellent post.
Can you elaborate on how this is hung up on the junior pilots? You guys really want several thousand Delta guys on the bottom when your senior pilots will bid Delta's growth jets now?
Should a significant percentage of Delta's pilots be bumped from base and equipment?
Just trying to follow your logic as it applies to the bottom 1/4 at both airlines.
Also, isn't it impossible to TA this thing without SLI? Could a Rep sign off on a deal that had an open ended arbitration and pass it along for ratification?
Call your rep and ask him if he's willing to sign off on rolling the dice with your career. I don't think too many at NWA are willing to do that either.
There has to be some logic here that I'm overlooking. Can you explain what the NWA MEC considers fair?