FDJ2 said:
Medflyer, the average DAL pilot flies more passengers than any of the other network carriers. So although that passenger may pay less, the DAL pilots fly more of those passengers every year, with fewer pilots, than any of the other network carriers. So your analogy is off the mark.
So DL loses money on every passenger, but then somehow makes it up on volume? I don't care how many passengers a DL pilots flies, if the unit costs are exceeding the unit revenues, your business strategy is failing.
You might want to consider that DAL has a higher CASM, because DAL is the only carrier with nearly a third of its block hours being flown with high cost RJs, which are factored into the DAL CASM as well as the largest RJ debt, which is also paid by DAL. No other carrier has nearly as many high cost RJs, and they don't incorporate the high RJ CASM into their network CASM.
RJ's do increase CASM, but the actual effect is quite small. Take a look at this link with the first quarter stats:
http://news.delta.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=9237
DL CASM (regionals included): 10.71
DL CASM (mainline only): 10.38
Either way, DL's CASM is way too high to be competitive. Keep in mind that RJ's also raise RASM as they tend to bring in more revenue on a per seat basis.
You suggest that somehow BK is a walk in the park for management, as if all they have to do is move to void contracts and scope language. Luckily it doesn't quite work that way.
BK is corporate failure. The CEO works for the BODs and the BODs work for the shareholders. If Grinstein were to take DAL into BK he will have failed his employer absolutely, since no one loses more in BK than the investor. Entering BK is not a negotiating strategy in order to rid ones self of pesky union contracts.
You're right, BK is corporate failure and DL is failing. DL is in its 4th straight year of losing money...all of the gains of the late 90's have been wiped out. DL is buried up to its eyeballs in debt. Maybe you call that success, but most people don't.
Are the RJ's part of the problem? Yes. Instead of fixing DL's broken mainline business, Leo and his gang of cronies just substituted in RJ's hoping for better days (read: USAirways collapse). Temporarily this strategy worked, but it has failed in the long run. Mainline is still broken and DL is just buried deeper in debt.
DALPA unwittingly signed off on this strategy. Instead of creating a contract that might encourage mainline growth (or at least prevent massive RJ growth), they gave Leo and his buddies tons of access to cheap (relatively speaking) RJ capacity. All of DL's pilots merrily went along with the strategy...as long as they had top pay no one stopped to think about the ramifications.
Somehow I doubt that the determining factor between BK and solvency is a 15% difference in pay between the DALPA position and DAL's.
Is it the determining factor? No.
Is it the triggering factor? Possibly.
The 15% difference isn't that much in the grand scheme of things. But if DL management can't even manage to get that item in line, then what's the point?