HAL
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 733
Also, from my perspective the issue isn't very much the 5 day international stuff (which is a function of non-daily flight schedules), it's the stupid 3 day lax, or 4 day vegas that, frankly, are inefficient because the company has no incentive to tweak the schedules to make them efficient.
When did it become the pilot's job to tell the airline when to schedule its flights?
Again, this isn't me being in favor of the management's side, but rather dealing with reality. Is the company purposely scheduling the flights like this to mess with the pilot's lifestyles? Or are they scheduling the flights to maximize passenger interest, thereby filling more seats and paying our salaries? If the union can show that a few minutes difference in schedules can increase pilot efficiency, then go for it. But if the company shows that the same schedule change results in decreased loads and less profit, then why are we asking for it?
I've been around this industry long enough to remember when unions asked for the sky, and in some cases got it. In all of those cases the contract was quickly followed by bankruptcy, furloughs, and sometimes liquidation. The common thread in all those negotiations was a lack of reality on both sides. The pilots just wanted more - period - and to heck with the consequences. The airlines thought the good times would never end, and the big bucks would never stop rolling in. Today, the airlines have taken a forced course in fiscal reality. If we don't do the same, we're bringing a boxing glove to a gun fight. We need to be prepared by knowing EXACTLY what is possible, then push for every cent of that. It's called being prepared, informed, and smart. Push for something that isn't possible, no matter how much you want it, and you're setting yourself up for bitter disappointment and a fractured pilot group.
For HA25, yes, other airlines pay a daily minimum on ICN trips. And again I'll ask, what percentage of the total paid pilot time is soft time for those airlines? If it is in line with the rest of the industry, fine. If we can show that our schedules don't have a higher percentage of soft time, we should have it too. If we're at a much higher percentage, we need to find out if an arbitrator might be willing to consider giving it to us. If the answer is yes, again, go for it. If not however, we have to face the reality of it and move on to something we can get. These are the questions an arbitrator WILL ask, and if we haven't prepared ourselves with the answer already, there is no point in asking it in the first place. That is how negotiations work in today's economy.
HAL