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Agree with everything except the implication that all narrowbody flying is in danger. It is not, unless it is sold for a cookie. I think priority number 1 for every upcoming contract should be to recapture any jet over 50 seats. That is more important than hourly rate raises, night overrides, per diem bumps and rigs. If the flying is gone, the rest of the contract doesn't mean anything. The more flying you outsource, the more pressure there is to outsource. I am against the notion of any kind of a B scale, but if the only way to get the 51+ seaters back on the mainline seniority lists is market based pay and work rule side letters, it has to be done. B scales are bad. Outsourcing is worse.
Occam:
You could be correct, but politically I can not find it to be a credible report given other known facts.If true, the USAPA spilt is going to look like a Girl Scout Bake Sale in comparison
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Translation: We mainline pilots will undercut the industry leading regional rates to "recapture" the flying.....Thanks "brother".......
Once again....this union is a joke....This is going to get ugly....
Is that kinda on par with being the smartest kid on the short bus?![]()
.....well the "smartest kids on the short bus" are making pretty good coin considering the industry....130K at the top end of the "short bus".....The mainline folks seem ready to undercut that to protect their jobs.....I guess there are whores at every level.......
Perhaps within the MEC, but not at the line pilot level.Perhaps management recently showed the MECs (in confidence), a juicy new carrot and/or a huge new stick. Could that have changed the political situation?
That is because the mainline pilots drew a circle around that flying that excluded the pilots performing it. A union's primary job is to bring folks together. By keeping us separate and allowing alter ego competition, we have reaped exactly what we have sown.The majors have been undercut by the regionals for years.
That is because the mainline pilots drew a circle around that flying that excluded the pilots performing it. A union's primary job is to bring folks together. By keeping us separate and allowing alter ego competition, we have reaped exactly what we have sown.
So maybe I'm agreeing with you.
Superpilot:
What Joe will correctly point out is that NWA and Delta's rates on similar equipment undercuts ASA's contract rates. Sad, but true. He's got us there.
Perhaps within the MEC, but not at the line pilot level.
A course reversal, regardless of sound logic and reason, would destroy credibility and trust. Already there was a halfway organized run on the MEC. Take the goodies off the table, along with job protections and the fear of fleet reductions and it is a highly undesireable position for any ALPA politician. A very quick way to be outside the circle of trust.
We don't know if Occam's bomb is real, a Hollywood prop, or wishful thinking on the part of the NWA MEC.
Both sides are pretty well painted in a corner.
Now management on the other hand.... although Occam says this is a MEC thing.... hmm, still need a lot more information....
...but the huge silent majority at each airline will see the writing on the wall, and vote the thing in.