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Dl Makes $137m

  • Thread starter Thread starter lowecur
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Also, I suggest if you are not married now to marry "rich." My wife does really well as an Ad VP, and that helps. My mom always said "you can fall in love with a rich girl just as easy as you can fall in love with a poor one."


Bye Bye--General Lee[/quote]

Whats his name?
 
Basically the same reserve we have now with the exception of the 24hr lc for intl. Our lc is 12hrs for both dom & intl. Looks like an improvement for intl. but no change dom. How often do resv. break guarntee? I have only broke 65hrs once in 7 months but been paid for 75. So unless we will fly more under the Dal rules looks like a wash on pay for resvs. Maybe a bid to wb fo lineholder will pay more with less days worked. Thanks again



12-hour long call, 2-hour short call. Right now you can be assigned eight short calls in a month (with the JCBA it will be six) witch are 12 hours long for domestic and 24 hours for international.

Yellow-slips let you request either a specific trip or various trip parameters if you are needed to fly. Sometimes it works out and sometimes it doesn't. There is no guarantee you will get exactly what you want. Honestly, I wish there was a "no-fly" option :).
 
You have to take FI for what it is, an anonymous aviation webiste. Don't get too wrapped up around the axle.

Bye Bye--General Lee

I guess that explains half the BS that gets poured out of your pie hole.
 
Spinproof:

Special items and one time charges are part of the profit and loss reporting, but not part of the profit and loss picture for the ongoing business.

For instance, lets say every month you make $10,000 and your bills are $2,500 giving you a $7,500 "profit" that you save & invest. In this same month, your daughter is getting married and she watches lots of the "E" channel. She decides to throw a bash of a reception and pay Brad & Angelina to attend. The bill for the wedding comes to $90,000.

If you evaluated that month, you have a $7,500 "profit" excluding the $90,000 bill for the reception. With the wedding, you report a loss of $82,500.

But hey, the kid is out of the house and your basic finances are sound.

That's not a very good example. Again, this one-time charge was a non cash item. Delta wrote down the $1B as loss of goodwill. What they're saying is that looking forward, Delta's ability to earn money is hampered due to the high oil prices. Thus, Delta's value to shareholders has been reduced by 1 billion dollars this quarter. In exchange, Delta gets a sizable tax break.

Here's a better example:
Let's say that Spinproof's daughter is unemployed and she married a Mesa pilot. Spinproof can now be expected to support the happy couple for 10, 20, maybe even 30 years. Thus his take-home income in the future will most likely be reduced unless he can start spending less (increase the margins in the case of Delta), or find a new source of income (expand).
 
Basically the same reserve we have now with the exception of the 24hr lc for intl. Our lc is 12hrs for both dom & intl. Looks like an improvement for intl. but no change dom. How often do resv. break guarntee? I have only broke 65hrs once in 7 months but been paid for 75. So unless we will fly more under the Dal rules looks like a wash on pay for resvs. Maybe a bid to wb fo lineholder will pay more with less days worked. Thanks again

I think you misunderstood the short call period. The short call period for domestic is 12 hours long and the short call period for international is 24 hours long of which you can be given two hours notice. I wish we had gotten NWA's 75 hour guarantee.

When I was on the ER it was very easy to break 70 hour guarantee with just one green-slip (pretty common on the ER). However, you still might only block 50 - 60ish hours. Now that I am on the 767 domestic (stupid move on my part, still kicking myself. I was a lineholder for godsakes! Granted it was in JFK) I fly less. Last month I was at 50+ hours but, this month I got a green-slip so, if I don't fly anymore this month I will get 82 hours credit with 35 hours block. Clear as mud?
 
Not to be a pain, but are you saying that y'alls(ours soon to be) long call is not 12hrs from call to report. Our raps(required availability periods) are 15hrs long with 9hrs of not having to answer the phone. Our longcall is phone on 24hrs/day but a 12hrs from phone call to report. Works great for commuters. So, if I understand you dom. is required to be avail for a 12hr window with as little as a 2hr report and intl. has a 24hr window with the same 2hr report? Basically a reserve has to be in base the whole set of resv. days. Thanks again and sorry for being a little slow.



I think you misunderstood the short call period. The short call period for domestic is 12 hours long and the short call period for international is 24 hours long of which you can be given two hours notice. I wish we had gotten NWA's 75 hour guarantee.

When I was on the ER it was very easy to break 70 hour guarantee with just one green-slip (pretty common on the ER). However, you still might only block 50 - 60ish hours. Now that I am on the 767 domestic (stupid move on my part, still kicking myself. I was a lineholder for godsakes! Granted it was in JFK) I fly less. Last month I was at 50+ hours but, this month I got a green-slip so, if I don't fly anymore this month I will get 82 hours credit with 35 hours block. Clear as mud?
 
When I said bankruptcy I should have specified chapter 7..... nevertheless general.... you have no clue how it is out there and I don't expect you to understand how hard it really is either. I don't and have never expected anyone with good seniority to take voluntary leave, so stop trying to put words into my posts and making yourself sound better. It is what it is and the bottom line is that you have no freaking clue because you have never been in that situation. Enjoy your delta.... Im done with you...

Net

Great, I am done with your complaining. I hope you have a great career at UPS. Enjoy it.


Bye Bye--General Lee
 
Also, I suggest if you are not married now to marry "rich." My wife does really well as an Ad VP, and that helps. My mom always said "you can fall in love with a rich girl just as easy as you can fall in love with a poor one."


Bye Bye--General Lee

Whats his name?[/quote]

You mean my WIFE? Oh, HIS name is Pat......?


Bye Bye--General Lee
 
I guess that explains half the BS that gets poured out of your pie hole.

And you drink it up like it is water........ I also have a bridge I can sell you...


Bye Bye--General Lee
 
Not to be a pain, but are you saying that y'alls(ours soon to be) long call is not 12hrs from call to report. Our raps(required availability periods) are 15hrs long with 9hrs of not having to answer the phone. Our longcall is phone on 24hrs/day but a 12hrs from phone call to report. Works great for commuters. So, if I understand you dom. is required to be avail for a 12hr window with as little as a 2hr report and intl. has a 24hr window with the same 2hr report? Basically a reserve has to be in base the whole set of resv. days. Thanks again and sorry for being a little slow.

No. Everyone defaults to long call to begin with. So, once you are awarded your schedule all of your days start as long call days. You have 12 hours to report while on long call. If scheduling decided to put you onto short call, they can move you from long to short call with 10 hours notice. You have 2 additional hours to report on short call (actually no set time but 2 hours is a good guide). Summary: long call equals 12 or more hours reponse time.
 
this one-time charge was a non cash item. Delta wrote down the $1B as loss of goodwill. What they're saying is that looking forward, Delta's ability to earn money is hampered due to the high oil prices. Thus, Delta's value to shareholders has been reduced by 1 billion dollars this quarter. In exchange, Delta gets a sizable tax break.
SIU: Ok, admittedly it was 18 years ago when I wrote a 12 page single spaced back and front answer to the question "explain and discuss the differences between STAT and GAAP accounting standards," but if memory serves correctly a non-cash write down of good will is not a basis for a taxable loss.

When Delta and NWA came out of bankruptcy they had to establish a value. In effect they hit "CONTROL,ALT,DELETE" and to re-boot their companies.

The market value of the companies has varied wildly, by over a half a billion in the last two days. When Delta came out bankruptcy they thought they had a ~10Bn company, right now the market says 2.0Bn.

Prior to merger the numbers need to be in the ballpark of so that 1.25 shares of Delta equals a NWA stock. These should end up close to market value.

I liked your Mesa example. However, I detect no shenannigans with DAL valuations.

Delta stock is still a buy at $6.81. I wish that I had dropped $50K in at $4 a share. Wife just asked me why I passed on a $20,000 profit this week, wish I had a good answer. None the less, I'm very pleased oil is down and DAL is up, way up. Bastian might have to revise his non-cash goodwill up before the date of Corporate Closing :)
 
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You guys ever notice that SWA doesn't have to take "one time good-will write offs" or whatever Enron accounting that Delta is doing to make themselves feel better? Let's face it, you Delta guys are pushing $8 Billion in losses so far this year. Not something I'd be proud of. Is it a sinking ship...only time will tell.
 
Yeah, I guess I have never been through a Bankruptcy??? (Didn't Delta go BK?) I am not going to apologize to you for having seniority. Should I have done a voluntary furlough? Would you have done that? Am I sorry I interviewed before you did? Not really. That is just luck. Your problem has always been entitlement. Why me? You complained the whole time, even though times were tough after 9-11, and ALPA did the best it could. You were seniority challenged, just like many people today. That is unfortunate, but reality. Some people chose to go to United and leave Southwest as Captains pre 9-11. Do I feel sorry for them? You do. People make choices, and that can affect them for their whole lives. It looks like I probably have the seniority NOT to be furloughed currently, and I am not ashamed of that. Also, I suggest if you are not married now to marry "rich." My wife does really well as an Ad VP, and that helps. My mom always said "you can fall in love with a rich girl just as easy as you can fall in love with a poor one."


Bye Bye--General Lee

General, I, much like you, enjoy reading the difference of opinion on this board. However, the issue of picking up IA's/Green Slips/White Slips/etc. with people on furlough should be clear...DON'T DO IT...If the company cannot cover thier schedule with the staff they have, I guess they will have to call back furloughs. This has nothing to do with seniority. Yes a senior pilot is entitled to pick up overtime before a junior pilot, but each of us signed our ALPA card we took responsibility for keeping the junior pilots employed. 5000 hrs per month of open time divided by 70 hrs. per line equals about 70 pilots that could have kept their jobs if senior pilots would have simply flown their assigined trips and went home. When times are good, take your seniority and fly overtime until your butt is sore. When times are bad, fly your line and don't answer the phone. As far as I'm cocerned every union contract should limit average line values to 70-75 hrs/month and prohibit the pilots from picking up overtime when other pilots are on furlough. If the company can't find the staffing to cover the operation then they will think twice about layoffs, or at least be forced to make a few callbacks. If (when) we furlough after the merger you will not find my name on the Greenslip list, and if I fly with a Captain that is picking up extra flying it will be a very silent four day trip.
 
Also, I suggest if you are not married now to marry "rich." My wife does really well as an Ad VP, and that helps. My mom always said "you can fall in love with a rich girl just as easy as you can fall in love with a poor one."
An AD VP of what? The nickel ads rep for Fayette County. Nobody here believes your nonsense. Your wife, yeah whatever.
 
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General, I, much like you, enjoy reading the difference of opinion on this board. However, the issue of picking up IA's/Green Slips/White Slips/etc. with people on furlough should be clear...DON'T DO IT...If the company cannot cover thier schedule with the staff they have, I guess they will have to call back furloughs. This has nothing to do with seniority. Yes a senior pilot is entitled to pick up overtime before a junior pilot, but each of us signed our ALPA card we took responsibility for keeping the junior pilots employed. 5000 hrs per month of open time divided by 70 hrs. per line equals about 70 pilots that could have kept their jobs if senior pilots would have simply flown their assigined trips and went home. When times are good, take your seniority and fly overtime until your butt is sore. When times are bad, fly your line and don't answer the phone. As far as I'm cocerned every union contract should limit average line values to 70-75 hrs/month and prohibit the pilots from picking up overtime when other pilots are on furlough. If the company can't find the staffing to cover the operation then they will think twice about layoffs, or at least be forced to make a few callbacks. If (when) we furlough after the merger you will not find my name on the Greenslip list, and if I fly with a Captain that is picking up extra flying it will be a very silent four day trip.

I understand where you are coming from. With the amount of posts I have, does it seem like I fly often? I do have lines that give me the low to mid 80's sometimes, but that is about it. Sometimes I swap to get a better trip, but that is about it. When Network Dork stated something about "yellow slips", I reminded him what they were about back when he was furloughed. I never said anything about picking up extra trips. I seem to get pretty close to what I want each month, and small tweaking is fine. My wife does great at her job, so I don't really have to pick up extra trips. I fly the ones I have, and enjoy them.

Bye Bye--General Lee
 
The tragedy of companies like Delta is that there are billions of dollars owed which will never be paid. Thousands of pilots lost pensions and senior management still left town with their retention bonuses and bankruptcy proof retirements. Nothing short of criminal negligence.
 
Don't worry Oldschool. The Gerbil Lee will let you know the upside of losing a pention and screwing creditors. He's upping his dose of kool-aide.
 
I understand where you are coming from. With the amount of posts I have, does it seem like I fly often? I do have lines that give me the low to mid 80's sometimes, but that is about it. Sometimes I swap to get a better trip, but that is about it. When Network Dork stated something about "yellow slips", I reminded him what they were about back when he was furloughed. I never said anything about picking up extra trips. I seem to get pretty close to what I want each month, and small tweaking is fine. My wife does great at her job, so I don't really have to pick up extra trips. I fly the ones I have, and enjoy them.

Bye Bye--General Lee

Sorry to jump on you there General. Just an issue that I have some strong feelings about. At my last company I was a few numbers away from the street and had the pleasure of flying with Captains who would gleefully boast about how much OT they were getting that month. It seems like the last time us here at DL had furloughs there were alot of pilots willing to walk over the furloughs for their own profit...in other news the $137 million is encouraging and hopefully we can avoid the industry trend of cutting pilot jobs this time around.
 
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The facts are they are financing the merger on the backs of employees. These same employees seem giddy to be on their way!

All this with DALPA's approval. Apparently sacrificing a few young for a "promise" is status quo for an ALPO run pilot group!
 
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