Because that's what the arbitrator will look at. Not the management, not the union leader, maintenance, training centers, chief pilots, contracts, or attitude. It boils down to career expectation as the main measuring stick for recent SLIs. I expect this one to be no different. And if you really are all about "Mesaba" I fully expect you to step from the RJ to the props to stick with "Mesaba" and not come to the Pinnacle side. But somehow, I think most will just swallow it and come over. Guys like Seven who will openly badmouth Pinnacle as being a crappy, unsafe carrier, and how Mesaba is ten folds ahead and safer. Well, will you keep to your word and promptly step over to the props to stay Mesaba, or be hypocritical and come to Pinnacle with the jets. Decisions, decisions!
Decision is made. Your airline are belong to us!! Oh yeah, I said it. Our training center, our union leaders, and our safety culture will follow us when we bid to a jet (oh yeah, Mesaba has those too). That is my point. There are more to airlines than just airplanes. And there is more to the career expectation thing than just airplanes too. As I have said previously, I expected to fly a 900 out of MSP, DTW, or MEM with a good contract and then flow to Delta when my number was up. Seven won't be flying for classic Pinnacle. He will be flying for a company that has Mesaba stamped all over it, with a CEO we may actually like (fingers crossed)