FDJ2 said:
Surplus, thanks for one of your mercifully shorter posts.
Just a few points.
1. The purchase of CMR was not forced. Cmr could have gone its own way. That is just a fact.
If you believe that your understanding of big business is limited. In either case, it is no longer relevant. What's done is done.
2. CMR did well prior to the acquisition because of its lucrative DAL contract, not because CMR was some independent power house. When DAL refused to sign another obscenely lucrative contract, due to an abundance of RJ lift becoming available, CMR knew the gig was up and was only too happy to join DAL as a wholly owned subsidiary.
"Only to happy"? Again, if that is what you want to believe nothing that I say will change your mind. If it makes you feel good to believe that well, I'm glad you feel good. The point is now moot from either perspective.
3. CMR is not losing money today, it just can't be deterimined if it is making any for DAL.
Sorry, my bad. I thought you said it was being "subsidized" by Delta. Now you say you "can't determine". I could maybe buy that. Just make up your mind. Either it is subsidized or you don't know. There's nothing wrong with not knowing and it's consistent with the rest of your remarks.
Your comments about DAL's restrictive scope having hurt the bottom line is amusing at best, particularly since DAL has unlimited RJ50s at its disposal and hasn't acquired all the 70 seaters its allowed to outsource. But if you believe that scope hurts the bottom line, than why do you have scope that precludes CMR from contracting MESA pilots to fly your RJs. Wouldn't that have made CMR competitive for the new RJs. I guess in your world scope is bad if it prevents you from being the low ball bidder, but good if it prevents someone else from doing it. That's very interesting.
If you really read what I said you would know that I claimed that Delta escaped the bottom line "hurt" or predatory scope effect because is was not in the Delta PWA prior to C2K. That is exactly why Delta has done well compared to the other legacy carriers who did have that type of scope.
For the record, Delta has not "outsourced" a single 70-seater as yet. Subsidiaries are not outsourcing. The Company (DAL) owns and operates all of those aircraft, just as it owns and operates the 757's at Song. Do not confuse your desire to fly those airplanes yourself, instead of their being flown by ASA and Comair pilots, with outsourcing.
The purpose of scope is to protect the pilots' jobs. That includes the jobs of ASA and Comair pilots as well as the jobs of Delta pilots. In the past, you (the Delta pilots) did not want certain types of flying jobs so you gave up your right to protect those jobs (aircraft with 70-seats or less) to the Company in exchange for money on your pay stub.
That was your doing. No one forced you. You did it because, at the time, you considered youselves too good to do that type of flying. Now that you are no longer so "privileged" you covet your neighbor's goods. Sorry, it's too late.
After the Company agreed to that, you are now, in your new contract, emulating the other majors by telling the Company what aircraft it can operate, how many it can operate, and where they can fly. That hurts the Company's bottom line. Not Comair's but Delta's.
You are doing this for several reasons, among them: 1) You have second thoughts about bargaining away your flying in small aircraft (I agree it was a stupid mistake), 2) Your efforts to get it back by putting your pilots in the cockpits of the small aircaft and displacing those pilots (currently there) in the process have failed, 3) Since you can't do that, you have decided to attempt to stop
the Company from selecting the type of aircraft that best fits the available markets. That is the same as telling the company that it may not fly 737's but it must fly more 767's, because that is what YOU prefer to fly.
In other words, you seek to manipulate and control market forces with Scope. That is not the purpose of Scope. That is a perversion of Scope.
You efforts have not been successful only because Delta management has refused to let you do all that you wanted to do. However, some of what they allowed you to do (restrict the number of 70-seaters) was foolish on their part.
It will not make them fly more 737's, which is what you would like, but it will cause them to lose market share and revenue. While they had no competitors in that area, they now do.
At a time when the Company is losing large sums of money, such restrictions on its flexibility are stupid. Now that USAir and United are both bankrupt, those pilot groups have been forced to remove those stupid restrictions. As a consequence, their fleets of 70-seat + regional jets are expanding at alarming rates. Additionally, they will be flown by pilots who earn far less than Comair or even ASA pilots, all of whom have (with the help of your union) jumped at the opportunity to give up their contracts and wages for the "growth". This will simply put more pressure on Delta, which stands to lose the competitive advantage it gained by not having the restrictive Scope limits prior to C2K. In turn, that will put more pressure on Delta pilots to make matching pay concessions in your own pay and benefits. It will also increase the pressure on Comair and ASA pilots to further widen the gap between your compensation levels (current or revised) and theirs. That in turn will continue to proliferate the small jets that you are trying to prevent (the Company will force you to do this) and to reduce the number of 737's you might otherwise have, IF you were making money and had the markets in which to use them. Your actions (DMEC & ALPA) are a classic case of attempting to cut of your nose to spite your face.
Bottom line. - Not securing ALL the flying for yourselves from the beginning was foolish and bad for Delta pilots. You let the Genie out of the bottle and now you're trying to put it back. You will not succeed.
Having made that mistake, not having restrictions on the small aircraft operated by contractors (or subsidiaries) in your contract prior to C2Kwas smart. Good for the Company and therefore, good for the pilots. It allowed Delta to gain considerable market advantage over the other idiots with restrictive market control Scope.
Changing that smarter policy to restrictive clauses that remove the Company's flexibility, especially in bad times, does nothing to help Delta pilots, does much to harm the Company of Delta, and is the equivalent of attempting to destroy deliberately the careers of the small airplane's pilots in a misguided effort to enhance your own position. Predatory!
Both ALPA and your MEC need to get their heads out of dark places. What is needed is an agreement between the big airplane and small airplane pilots as to where the dividing line will be set, on a permanent basis.
This is NOT something that you can impose unilaterally and efforts to do so are doomed to failure. Once that agreement is reached, the Company's flexibility must be restored by the removal of attempts to restrict its selection of aircraft types.
Only the Company should decide which aircraft are to be operated, how many of what type will be operated and where they will be operated. Finally, the pilots of the big airplanes together with the pilots of the small airplanes must act in unison to prevent continued outsourcing to companies not owned by Delta.
There's no question that this has become a mess. The responsibility for creating that mess rests squarely on the shoulders of the ALPA leadership and the mainline pilots. Pandora's box was opened, management has taken full advantage of it, and it is YOUR fault.
We small airplane pilots will help you to close the lid on the "box" that you opened because it is in our interest to do so, but we are not going to do that by eliminating ourselves for your exclusive benefit. I know you don't want to "share" but it is the only choice you have left. Either you reach an acommodation with us that shares the spoils or your position will continue to erode and ours will continue in turmoil.
Continued fighting among ourselves will not help you and it will not help us. It is in our mutual interest to reach an agreement.
All you have to do is comprehend that you cannot dictate the terms of that agreement. Keep trying and you do so at your own peril.
I hope that's short enough for you to understand it.