Rez O. Lewshun
Save the Profession
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2004
- Posts
- 13,422
T-bags = you have assumptions that under a NSL a senior pilot would have to interview. ie: do you have to interview w/ the DC chief pilot if you want to transfer in from Chicago? No- there simply has to be an opening. The biggest roadblock to a NSL are the assumptions that individual pilots have about how it will work.
How? How do you set it up so we can move from one company to another? Don't you think CorpAmerica will have something to say about the ability to change employers?
Do you think CEO's really care who is flying their a/c? From experience- pilot recruitment offices are an expense- all they need are pilots that fill their insurance needs and get through training in the average time- that's it. We ARE FUEL to them. An expense required to get the a/c from A to B. They want that expense to be as cheap as possible.
You are dealing with a long standing history. Legacy Carriers like UAL, DAL, CAL, NWA, AMR liked to advertise that thier pilots are the best. Of course this isn't prevelent today... but the idea of seeking out thru interviews and hiring your own is somewhat of an ownership mentality with each airline.
How are you going to convince an airline to give up owenership of who it hires to fly its jets?
Rez- how did we convince companies to adopt the seniority system to begin with? Don't fool yourself- our seniority system creates a ripple affect in training costs that is very expensive. Our seniority system is also causing so much strife that mergers are being held up. We're affecting the airline industry in a huge way.
Mergers aren't being held up... they might not be as efficient....
Here is another problem you create with your NSL and ability to move around.....
If a senior group of pilots sees that thier company is going to collapse, then they will use thier senoirity to go find a better carrier. Now where do the junior pilots at the good carrier go to? The only jobs left would be junior slots at the poor carrier. Why?
All you've done is created a windfall for senior pilots at a weak company, at the expense of junior pilots at a strong company.. AND you've created many training events!! Because the new top 200 pilots want the Captain slots on the bigger jets vacated by the original 200. But wait.. senior pilots to the New 200 at another company want those 200 slots...
The way to mitigate that is status pay. Regradless of equipment... a US Air Line Captain makes 150,000K. An FO makes 80,000.
So... a BE-1900 and a B747 Captian 150K.
and an SF340 and A330 FO makes 80K.
Or do you think training events are not needed?
Under a NSL, there would be a training cost incentive to increase wages to retain pilots. Seniority would mean something as everyone would be in their natural position. Aviation will be growing= and at least under a NSL- the appropriate pilots would be the ones who got furloughed- ie: kids out of college- not senior Aloha/ATA pilots and 35-40 yo ex regional captains.
Appropriate? Why should a college kid have to pay for Aloha's CEO's inability? That is a core question. Why is an Aloha pilot entitled to a FedEx job over the junior pilot at FedEx?
Are you saying that a NSL would cause growth? What happens once everyting stabilizes? Would the NSL continue the growth?
Think also of the security of diversifying your career that much. Diversifying the type of flying. The diversity of bases now opened up to everyone. The diversity of company cultures now opened up.
Companies take pride in thier culture even though its BS. Why would a company want thier culture opened up to anyone? If they didn't care then just about anyone could get hired anywhere... but there seems to be somewhat of a culture puzzle to figure out...to get hired..
Think of how much more control you'll have over your life knowing that once you gain seniority- you will not lose it unless the entire market for pilots decreases- which is not predicted to happen. Our current system is SO negative- and so unfair=- that when compared to the benefits- we have the environment to work the problem and finally get it done.
All you are doing is just re arranging the deck chairs. There are still only so many jobs... but all you want to do is make the junior guys system wide or nationally pay for the mistakes of CEO's locally.
I am not sure that is fair. In away that is age discrimination.
What criteria must one have to get a union card/number? can a MIL guy get one then go fly 20 years in the USAF and then get out and be a B787 Captain at NorthDelta? If 20 years at a MIL job would not count towards his NSL, then whats the point? That is what happens now...anyway...
T-bags:
Again- those are assumptions and problems to work out.
That is the real kicker... more later...
In all honesty- that's not the real question. The real one is that if we set guild payrates- which i agree is a start-just not an end solution- you're asking pilots at weak companies to put their company at risk and not do everything possible to save it. Everyone is scared out of their mind not to just lose pay- but lose the schedule and life.
If their company goes under- they will lose that schedule- and many pilots have lost their family b/c of that too- It's not an end all solution unless we can protect pilots from companies going out of business too.
Sounds ok.. but at whose expense will we protect those pilots. If at the gov'ts expense.. that is socialism.
So is it at another pilots expense?
Not to mention all the pilots criss-crossing the skies on bad commutes b/c their company pulled out of cities where we had roots. How many AAA pilots have houses in PIT and San Diego still? How many CAL pilots w/ houses in DEN?
So if 200 pilots at AAA see the writing on the wall and use thier NSL to go to FedEx... where do the bottom 200 FDX pilots go?
And what triggers the ability for senior AAA pilots to take thier portable seniority with them? Will there be quarterly bids? Yearly? An economic event?
W/ a NSL you just bid for whatever company is close to where you live.
Why? Maybe I like living in ATL but the schedules out of ORD suit me fine?
You hold what you hold and all that needs to happen is have the market go up for pilots.
I can tell you if the market goes up for pilots many will forget a NSL. The NSL is just a response to regression... more pilots having to share a smaller peice of the pie. Once growth returns and their is enough pie for all... NSL loses support...
In addition, Hope has its place.... but it seems your NSL depends too much on hope... 'that the market goes up...'
You can choose to be a turboprop captain if you like if it gets you the schedule and base you want- if you'd rather fly widebodies around the world- than bid that-
You still haven't convinced me how management and gov't are going to accept all this....
But this idea that one pilot is better than another- Regional vs Major, TP vs Jet, Military vs Civilian, Wide vs Narrow, Capt vs FO - for the most part is really, really invalid. We need to all get to a place where we respect ALL pilots- 172 to PA44 to F16 to RJ to 777- they all have their challenges and all can kill or violate you if not done well.
Agreed! But you can't legislate respect or mandate respect with a NSL. Respect is a personal choice. It really depnds on how good of a job our parents did...
To answer one of your questions- i'd say the fairest way is to go DOH from the time you joined a 121/union job or when you passed military flight school, then subtract months/years when you weren't actively flying. That respects all sides as equally as we can. And yes- i would think that you should build seniority in our union while serving in the military. I'd question anyone who disagrees w/ that- and i'm a civilian. But it would all have to be worked out. None of the problems are bigger than the ones our current system provide us. Remember that- and we can work out the rest.
It all comes down to CorpAmerica and money. How are you going to get them to pay for what your understand to be thier share of this??!
I am accused of being an ALPA cheerleader.
The reason why I am an ALPA cheerleader is because regardless if NSL is a good idea or not... nothing is going to happen until we have leverage. As long as we continue to the fly jets day in and out there is no motivation for CorpAm and gov't to do a damm thing.
20,000 pilots in uniform with hats, on the The Mall infront of the Captial will speak loud and clear. Basically what that means is everyone else is flying. If we don't get some action from gov't and CorpAm then we'll hold another demonstration... with 40,000 pilots. 40,000 pilots is basically a shut down of the US Air Transporation System. A percentage of flights might operate.....
Now you have the attention of the gov't and CorpAm.
The question is.... HOW are WE going to get the leverage of 20,000 then 40,000? Only a unified pilot group. You can't sit around waiting for "leadership" to make the move. Grow a pair and show the leadership that when they charge out of the foxhole, WE, the membership is racing to get ahead of the leadership to get to the fight first.
Only when 20,000 to 40,000 pilots show up on The Mall will we be able to take a blank check from Gov't and CorpAm and fill it out.
So... if you want a NSL, or whatever you think we need, the only way to do it is unification.
Wanna pom pom?
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