To answer your questions Surplus :
1. Yes, there IS protectional language in our CBA regarding "transfer of operations".
Specifically, AMR indeed can transfer our current and future CRJ's to ANYONE provided our CBA goes with it.
Included in our CBA (among other things) are our pay-rates and "affected pilots".
So if the say, 10 or so current CRJ's go to AA than the pilots CURRENTLY flying them go too. However, our Letter 3 (flow-thru) agreement (also part of the CBA) would allow AA furloughees to displace any of those captains who are not "eagle rights" (elected not to flow-thru). So out of the 50 current captains the AA pilots would get to bump maybe 20. They cannot touch to F/O's as they have no bumping rights to the F/O position. The "bumped" captains would theoretically go to the right seats.
It also must be noted that NO Eagle flow-thru captain can be bumped by an AA furloughee, unless that furloughee is senior to him/her on the AA seniority list.
However to transfer the CRJ's, they can only be transferred if they can find a way to do it "cost neutral".
Now if these A/C go to mainline, than mainline F/A's work them.
=cost increase.
Mainline mechanics work on them (plus transfer of tools and equipment, training).
= another cost increase.
Paperwork for transfer of operating certificate.
=another cost increase.
So it would seem that to negate these aspects of MULTIPLE cost increases the AA pilots pay rates would have to be SUBSTANTIALLY less than current Eagle rates.
Now another kicker. If AA pilots want pension accrual while operating these that will do what ?
= BIG cost increase.
Even if the APA agrees that all pilots who fly 70-seaters will NOT acrue ANY pension benefits, there pay rates will have to be SUBSTANTIALLY less than Mesa's.
Factor in the pension scenario....
I snicker to even think of it.
2. Apparently, the APA has waived their "displacement rights" in suppliment W. That means they intend NOT to displace any current flow-thru captain (50-seaters or less). But they want all captain seats above the current fleet count. So every jet that is replacing a turboprop will be staffed by our pilots.
After that it is a "jets-for-jobs" scenario with furloughed AA pilots getting all captains seats and current F/O's getting the shaft.
3. These agreements leave a lot of room for creative future interpretation by AMR and the future is unclear. Meeting with Eagle management occur tomorrow to get better understanding by all parties what our MEC will and will not tolerate.
The jury is out.
* Listening to Carty's latest, he now admits BK still strong possibility even with agreements. Since that will only hurt the voting, why he would say that now can only be looked at ominously (kinda - "I warned you it was still possible").
BK can't be much worse for us.
1. Yes, there IS protectional language in our CBA regarding "transfer of operations".
Specifically, AMR indeed can transfer our current and future CRJ's to ANYONE provided our CBA goes with it.
Included in our CBA (among other things) are our pay-rates and "affected pilots".
So if the say, 10 or so current CRJ's go to AA than the pilots CURRENTLY flying them go too. However, our Letter 3 (flow-thru) agreement (also part of the CBA) would allow AA furloughees to displace any of those captains who are not "eagle rights" (elected not to flow-thru). So out of the 50 current captains the AA pilots would get to bump maybe 20. They cannot touch to F/O's as they have no bumping rights to the F/O position. The "bumped" captains would theoretically go to the right seats.
It also must be noted that NO Eagle flow-thru captain can be bumped by an AA furloughee, unless that furloughee is senior to him/her on the AA seniority list.
However to transfer the CRJ's, they can only be transferred if they can find a way to do it "cost neutral".
Now if these A/C go to mainline, than mainline F/A's work them.
=cost increase.
Mainline mechanics work on them (plus transfer of tools and equipment, training).
= another cost increase.
Paperwork for transfer of operating certificate.
=another cost increase.
So it would seem that to negate these aspects of MULTIPLE cost increases the AA pilots pay rates would have to be SUBSTANTIALLY less than current Eagle rates.
Now another kicker. If AA pilots want pension accrual while operating these that will do what ?
= BIG cost increase.
Even if the APA agrees that all pilots who fly 70-seaters will NOT acrue ANY pension benefits, there pay rates will have to be SUBSTANTIALLY less than Mesa's.
Factor in the pension scenario....
I snicker to even think of it.
2. Apparently, the APA has waived their "displacement rights" in suppliment W. That means they intend NOT to displace any current flow-thru captain (50-seaters or less). But they want all captain seats above the current fleet count. So every jet that is replacing a turboprop will be staffed by our pilots.
After that it is a "jets-for-jobs" scenario with furloughed AA pilots getting all captains seats and current F/O's getting the shaft.
3. These agreements leave a lot of room for creative future interpretation by AMR and the future is unclear. Meeting with Eagle management occur tomorrow to get better understanding by all parties what our MEC will and will not tolerate.
The jury is out.
* Listening to Carty's latest, he now admits BK still strong possibility even with agreements. Since that will only hurt the voting, why he would say that now can only be looked at ominously (kinda - "I warned you it was still possible").
BK can't be much worse for us.