Inclusivescope,
It is weird, you almost seem giddy at the prospect. Nice. First of all, the other mainline carriers have NOT had the retirements so far this year like we have. We have had 600 so far this year---and Captains that retire have a ripple effect. Second, we will have even more retire due to the Feb 1st drop dead date on the lump sum pensions. As of Sep 1st, we had 1271 eligible to take their lump sums, and even half of that would be a large retirement. Thanks to our recent TA concerning retired pilots hanging around until their replacement is trained---no planes will be parked. Then, add on a 6% increase in flying as of Feburary 1st of next year. All of those combined are things that USAir/UAL/ AA etc DON'T have. None of them have had a retirement problem like we have had. That essentially furloughs pilots from the top. Our crew resources people have said that we could increase the cap from 75 hours to 83 hours and still have to recall, and that is before the next 500 Captains go. Also, it is thought that Dalpa has already negotiated most of the new concession package--and the work rules have already been worked on. The NYC LEC chairman elluded to the fact that we have worked with the company on them, and despite having a large pay cut, some quality of life issues have been retained---so I would take that as we have a cap increase---but not a large large one. Could that be changed in court? Probably. But in the recent SEC filing, even Delta stated that some things agreed upon with Dalpa might not be changed due to agreements made---even if we have to go to court. I don't know what those are, and neither do you.
Bye Bye--General Lee