COOPERVANE
Member since 1967
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2002
- Posts
- 2,167
Its a surprise that United would rather have 5 135s instead of 5 200s that ASA had available
It's no surprise to me. ASA continues to circle the bowl and the GO continues to sing Kum-ba-ya.
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Its a surprise that United would rather have 5 135s instead of 5 200s that ASA had available
Maybe I'm late to the party, but has anyone else noticed that our new uniforms are spec'd exactly like Skywest's? I recently saw a Skywest FO and noticed the color of his strips and how they go all around the sleeve. exact same as my restriped blazer. Buttons are the same too. Throw in no "new name" and the wing design almost the same. Hummmmmmm
If I was management, and the end goal was "One" airline, this would be how I'd play it.
Guys, dont get so wrapped up with legacy Expressjet getting contract extensions and 5 airplanes. This is good for the bottom line of Expressjet. Understand this, management wants us to be divided and to throw the other side under the bus and have to fend for themselves. We need to look at the big picture, and focus on getting an industry leading union contract with fair and equitable seniority integration that works for all. We have much bigger fish to fry than to worry about this. I am legacy ASA, and yes I am disappointed to see some of these happenings of our company but I also see the big picture and realize what is good for all of us. On a side note, there are quite a few items in the Transtion and Process Agreement that may or may not preclude where growth airplanes go in a situation like this. For those of you legacy ASA'ers who might not know, Legacy Expressjet is still using a different dispatch software / system as well a different method for weight and balance. Even though we have achieved SOC from a regulatory perspective there are still significant procedural, accounting, and operational differences between the ERJ and CRJ sides of Expressjet. All of these items could dictate how and where gowth airplanes go. Lets look at the big picture, focus on whats important, and not put the cart before the horse.....
Its a surprise that United would rather have 5 135s instead of 5 200s that ASA had available
Remember CAL owns those 135's. They control what we pay and I'm sure it was cheaper than the 200's..
Who said it was for United?
Guys, dont get so wrapped up with legacy Expressjet getting contract extensions and 5 airplanes. This is good for the bottom line of Expressjet. Understand this, management wants us to be divided and to throw the other side under the bus and have to fend for themselves. We need to look at the big picture, and focus on getting an industry leading union contract with fair and equitable seniority integration that works for all. We have much bigger fish to fry than to worry about this. I am legacy ASA, and yes I am disappointed to see some of these happenings of our company but I also see the big picture and realize what is good for all of us. On a side note, there are quite a few items in the Transtion and Process Agreement that may or may not preclude where growth airplanes go in a situation like this. For those of you legacy ASA'ers who might not know, Legacy Expressjet is still using a different dispatch software / system as well a different method for weight and balance. Even though we have achieved SOC from a regulatory perspective there are still significant procedural, accounting, and operational differences between the ERJ and CRJ sides of Expressjet. All of these items could dictate how and where gowth airplanes go. Lets look at the big picture, focus on whats important, and not put the cart before the horse.....
Peace out!
In summary, "We" cannot have any influence over merging all because ALL are not willing participants and the INC MGMT has been very clear that it will not happen--ask the Xjet guys. And if we were, there would be a cost too steep to make it happen. Based on the history above, most pilots wouldn't want to make those kind of sacrifices. It's a pipedream and the benefits would never outweight the benefits--history proves it!
There is no way someone going from six months of flying the -200 just hops in a -900 and has a stellar time of it. No way.
Are there lots of differences between the E135 and 145?
Not the same for the 200 vs. 900
Or even the 200 vs 700. Systems are less complex on the 7/9 as well as it lands COMPLETELY different from the 200.
If you truely believe that you are operating at 100% capacity in your brain and adding another aircraft type will send you over the edge, then honestly, please quit and find another profession.
I know you've been in Nam for a while, but in case you haven't heard, ASA has been scheduling their pilots for 5-8 legs a day after scheduled (not operational) reduced rest overnights. Since you can't use 100% of your brain on a message board post, I doubt you're using 100% of it on the 13th hour of duty after an 8 hour scheduled overnight where you got 5 hours of sleep. Don't be a moron.