Ty Webb said:
the .... agreement that DAL has with Skywest...."no compete" clause- it is a standard business practice.
Copy?
Say again, you are coming in garbled and uninformed. Only joking.
But you are comparing apples and oranges. Non compete clauses are common in employment contracts where an individual is restrained from using proprietary resources to profit upon separation from an employer. This is another issue entirely. (Also, we are not talking about Delta controlling where Skywest can fly under Delta code. We are talking about what they can do under non-DL ticket stock)
Businesses may not collude to exclude other businesses from the market. In the case of airlines, the Department of Transportation has primary jurisdiction over anti trust issues. However, the airframe manufacturers fall under the jurisdiction of the Federal Trade Commission under the recent clearance agreement. Since ALPA's actions are so broad and far reaching, it is very difficult for a manufacturer to sell a 70 to 110 seat aircraft in the United States - despite the fact an eager market exists for these airplanes. This is a problem for aircraft manufacturers and they can seek remedy in the Courts - or the FTC can step in.
Of course unions are designed to be a monopoly - so there is a exclusion of the Sherman Anti Trust Act called Section 6 of the Clayton Act - which exempts unions from being considered a monopoly and busted up under the Sherman Act. But unions are only protected to the extent that they are creating a monopoly (aka - restraint of trade ) over
labor, unions can not determine the
tools and methods of production.
This thread is about Skywest operating other airplanes (tools and equipment) and ALPA's ability to stop Skywest from acquiring this equipment. I believe that ALPA has reached too far when they write contracts that stop another airline, flying codeshare for yet a fourth party, from purchasing aircraft that are configured in a way ALPA does not prefer.
There are lots of contracts out there. Just because the parties agree, does not make it "legal" or binding. You can agree to buy crack from your dealer, but it might be hard to get the Courts to enforce that contract in the event of breach.
ALPA has decided the regional jet, particularly the 70 to 110 seat versions are a threat to be destroyed and restricted. This is another area where ALPA is on shaky legal ground. A better policy would be to bring pilots together and not work so hard on the apartied system of "haves" and "have nots."
Since you were big on the distinction of
domestic code share, I guess that list would only include Delta, ASA, Comair, Chautauqua, Mesa, Northwest, Mesaba, American Eagle, Continental, Jet Express, Gulfstream and ACA, but I am probably forgetting some body. It is a really simple, workable scope that ALPA has - thanks for your support
