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2. You can't sue ALPA National with any success, because the National advisors present specifically suggested that it should have been sent to the pilot group for vote
3. Our local MEC doesn't have a ton of cash to begin with after the money spent on the SIA. Since you can't sue ALPA National successfully because of (2) above, you only have a small pot of money to go around if you somehow got a favorable ruling suing the local AAI ALPA.
4. Even if you successfully sue the individual MEC members
For those reasons, the people suing ALPA are simply barking up a tree that's not going to bear any fruit. It may make them feel better, but the only people who win are the lawyers (as usual).
You guys are dealing with a shrinking side right now- why would you want to hold onto that?
PCL and Lear--you're union guys, right?
Lear has said that he's a contract compliance (grievance) guy. I've never claimed to hold any position.
That's not the information I got directly from an MEC member who was present, but I wasn't there and, quite honestly, I haven't read the minutes, just took that person at their word. If not they're still insulated because they followed the policy manual, just not as bulletproof as I thought, but if they refused to say anything one way or another, hard to draw any conclusions to add to a lawsuit...No, they didn't. They refused to give any official guidance on that, because it wasn't their place. The reps practically begged for advice on which way to vote, but the attorneys and national officers can't give that sort of advice. They can only give analysis and options, not guidance.
I understand that, but aren't they still specifically-named on the suit currently pending?As a legal matter, there is no such thing as the ATN MEC. It exists only within the ALPA structure, not as a real legal entity, so you can't sue the MEC even if you wanted to. You can only sue ALPA International, which is the only legal entity. Each MEC doesn't even have its own bank accounts. It's all just on paper.
I understand that also, but there's also a max indemnification of $1 Million per person if memory serves, so technically they COULD sue named individuals (and have), but even if they got an award (which I doubt), ALPA is only on the hook for $1 Million each and, as you said, would handle their defense, whether with in-house attorneys or hiring outside counsel as necessary.That can't really be done, either. All ALPA reps are indemnified, so even if you got a judge to take a case against an individual rep, ALPA is the one who handles the defense and is responsible for any judgment. It's impossible to get to an individual rep's money in a lawsuit.
Oh it's possible,,, you can sue for anything, but in this case it's pretty much pi$$ing up a rope.Wow!
Mention a lawsuit against ALPA, and Lear and PCL sure are quick to point out that it's not a possibility.
I think PCL and I were both pretty vocal that the 1st deal sucked. In retrospect, the deal just sucked less than this one did in terms of money, especially now that the 717's are going away.You guys sure you didn't have anything to do with the first SLI agreement being turned down?
Still loving my ignore list by the way.