Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

If/When Spirit Strikes

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
Beer good , Strike Bad

It's ONE of the answers. All of them are relatively painful:

4. Lobby for a minimum entrance standards for ALL commercial pilots. Similar to the bill that's currently being worked to require an ATP but WITHOUT any loopholes. Dry up the supply artificially.

You have any better suggestions, Mr. Wizard? (couldn't resist the facetious ending remark, owe you another beer for that one).
How about making the ACT score of 28 or a SAT of 1280, a requirement to hold an ATP, that would reduce the ranks a lot. Another good answer right?, beer would taste good. What ever action is taken, there will be unintended consquences, those are the things that would worry me.
 
Aircobra,

You mention both United and Comair strikes in a few of your posts earlier. I think you meant Northwest, but you asked what they accomplished, so here goes: United's strike of 1985 stopped Dick Ferris from turning the company into a bottomfeeder like Lorenzo's CAL was at the time, cutting pay by 50% and destroying work rules. Had Ferris succeeded the profession would likely be a lot worse off than it is today. The NWA strike in 1998 gave their pilots industry leading pay, while the company was still able to be profitable until 9/11. The Comair strike also led to briefly industry leading pay and work rules, which were quickly surpassed by Air Wisconsin and Horizon. Everything that has happened to Comair since (and any other regional with a decent contract) has been a direct result of the spineless Mesa pilots refusing to stand up for themselves and the profession, ratifying their abortion of a contract in Spring '03, which was then used as a hammer by every mainline management to get their regionals to take concessions or have their flying replaced by Mesa, and soon CHQ as well.

There comes a time when this profession just isn't worth it anymore. If Spirit mgt succeeds in imposing the concessions they are demanding WHILE THE COMPANY IS PROFITABLE nonetheless, that may be the point where burning the house down with honor intact is preferable to going to work everyday with their tails between their legs.
 
Aircobra,

You mention both United and Comair strikes in a few of your posts earlier. I think you meant Northwest, but you asked what they accomplished, so here goes: United's strike of 1985 stopped Dick Ferris from turning the company into a bottomfeeder like Lorenzo's CAL was at the time, cutting pay by 50% and destroying work rules. Had Ferris succeeded the profession would likely be a lot worse off than it is today. The NWA strike in 1998 gave their pilots industry leading pay, while the company was still able to be profitable until 9/11. The Comair strike also led to briefly industry leading pay and work rules, which were quickly surpassed by Air Wisconsin and Horizon. Everything that has happened to Comair since (and any other regional with a decent contract) has been a direct result of the spineless Mesa pilots refusing to stand up for themselves and the profession, ratifying their abortion of a contract in Spring '03, which was then used as a hammer by every mainline management to get their regionals to take concessions or have their flying replaced by Mesa, and soon CHQ as well.

There comes a time when this profession just isn't worth it anymore. If Spirit mgt succeeds in imposing the concessions they are demanding WHILE THE COMPANY IS PROFITABLE nonetheless, that may be the point where burning the house down with honor intact is preferable to going to work everyday with their tails between their legs.

The '85 strike never needed to happen. United management wanted to implement a B Scale just like American had, it was nothing like Lorenzo or turning United into a giant Lorenzo like holding company. Comair got no support from Delta's pilot group and that industry leading pay you mentioned was like being the thinnest kid at fat camp. You also said "briefly" well that is my whole point, you have everything to lose and but even when you win and there are gains its always "briefly". In 2000 United had the best contract in the industry...briefly. Long term effect is what I am talking about. What will the long term effect be on Spirit? All 'profitable' means is Spirit is going to buy new aircraft and try to increase its market share, it doesn't mean they are going to divide up percentages of that profit and give it to labor groups even if pilots do get concessions. Just look for ticket prices to get higher and the subsequent implications of doing so at the airline with the lowest customer satisfaction in the industry. Perhaps we should get classes on managing expectations as part of indoc.

As far as the rest of your last papagraph, I never took anything from my employers as an affront to my honor. I would never had gone to work at a place like Spirit in the first place because I imagined exactly what it would be like, and it seems like I was right. I had a buddy turn down a job at AirTran a few years back for the same reasons, seems he was right too. What would you tell a guy who goes to say, Mesa, and then gets treated bad? "hey dude I told you Mesa sucks and not to go there." No hard feelings, nothing personal. Its not an indictment of the profession, its just an indictment of that company.
 
...it doesn't mean they are going to divide up percentages of that profit and give it to labor groups even if pilots do get concessions.

If the labor groups are helping to finance the growth (with a concessionary contract), why wouldn't they give out a percentage?
 
If the labor groups are helping to finance the growth (with a concessionary contract), why wouldn't they give out a percentage?

Therein lies your mistake. Spirit's, and any airline's really, main goal is to capture more market share. Your concessions will go to accomplish that goal. You said yourself they were getting new planes. Even if an airline turns a profit for a year but shows no growth the year is considered a failure. It paints a picture of potential weakness that makes banks less likely to loan money for further expansion. Just because they made a profit doesn't mean they are just going to sit back and congratulate themselves. I would venture to say that money has been spent or leveraged already. Put away anything ALPA gives you because they will just tell you want you want to hear. You are not going to see any profits divvied up and given to you if you threaten to strike. Try and find out everything you can about Oaktree Capital and why they loaned Spirit the money and what they expect in return.
 
From military comparisons which are completely irrelevant on so many facets to being a management sycophant.......

Nope we all know "its all managements fault." Do you have that embroidered into your Snuggie so you and your favorite excuse for doing nothing can snuggle up and be all warm and toasty each night.
 
Nope we all know "its all managements fault." Do you have that embroidered into your Snuggie so you and your favorite excuse for doing nothing can snuggle up and be all warm and toasty each night.
It is management's responsibility, something you've failed to learn.

Learning: a change in behavior as a result of experience.


Once again, the conservative blueprint and mindset comes out... corporations are good. CEOs= partiarch father figure... do as your told, don't talk back, be thankful for what you are given.
 
It is management's responsibility, something you've failed to learn.

Learning: a change in behavior as a result of experience.


Once again, the conservative blueprint and mindset comes out... corporations are good. CEOs= partiarch father figure... do as your told, don't talk back, be thankful for what you are given.

You mean thirty years of doing the same things with the same results and getting nowhere has yet to teach you anything. What do you need another 30 years?

As far as your last paragraph goes keep you clown antics for the circus. No one said this but you. I guess the topic doesn't matter. Just create more arguments you can have with yourself.

Hey let me ask you when it comes to driving down wages at Spirit when is it managements fault, and when it is the fault of retired military pilots? Do you have a chart or something? When an airline pays well is it because there are less retired military pilots at that airline?

Rez face it you have just said too many stupid things to be taken as credible or serious. Why don't you let people with something meaningful to say have a discussion, and you just run along now, get into your Snuggie and have a nice cup of warm milk..... Shhh! the adults are talking.
 
Flying is an honorable profession, but your post like several others illustrates the problems I am talking about. There is very little willingness to examine situation outside the particular wants and needs of our labor group. Most complaints are legit when taken individually, but when taken as a whole, it becomes part of an very unproductive ALPA generated narrative of "us against them". The insults by some and the very fact you mention that you are offended that someone dares to disagree with you are indicative of why the same cycles have been repeated for over thirty years. What organization thrives where differing opinions are shouted down and or any suggestion of self examination is met with open hostility?
Wow... amazing and hypocritical. What you are advocating here is the jetblue open door policy or what you have at your current employer. You are getting your lunch handed to you on this thread.... you're the small minority here so now it is described by you as no one welcomes your opinion and that is the root of the problems over the last 30 years. GMAFB.

Up to the usual tactics I see Rez of creating arguments to have with yourself. Where did I ever say to give in to management? Here you are talking about the rights of representation like I am calling for Spirit to de- unionize. I am talking about how to make representation stronger, to have more negotiating power by presenting a united front, not of pilots and Spirit and pilots in Manitoba which ostensibly means nothing to Spirit's management, but of Spirit employees with Spirit employees. I said that we needed to foster better teamwork across the board with other labor groups at the SAME airline, not just with pilot groups at other airlines. The airline is your team, your family, your coworker, your job, and your paycheck. Stronger teamwork across the airline presents a stronger front in dealing with management.
You have already been told that Spirit pilots have tried to the SWA style of working with... it failed. Now the result is a possible strike. I started this thread to show solidarity with the Spirit pilots. The problem when you hook up to other labor groups is you start to negotiate with them whether you like it or not. Suddenly negotiation capital is lost because gains were made for another group. Sorry, when it comes to organized labor, ALPA is the best compared to others. ALPA's leverage would be other groups gain and Spirit pilots loss.




I think honor should not be limited to your labor group but should extend to all your actions. Somehow doing what we were hired to do has been equated with being a sellout. Why has it gotten to the point where trying to save fuel, save time, help the customer, or wearing a uniform as outlined in the company handbook you signed in indoc means you are selling out?
Do you agree with civil disobedience or not. Non violent resistance. At what point do you stop being a slave to master and liberate yourself?


Unfortunately sticking it to "the man" often also means sticking it to your coworkers. That is the second part of what I am saying. If you are going to demand respect then you have to demonstrate to your coworkers that you are worthy of it, otherwise they will never support you. Do you inhabit a world where airline pilots are not viewed by the rest of the airline as lazy prima donna's? Because I sure don't. I mean its a running joke even among pilots. So we are already starting in the hole with the way we are viewed by our coworkers and management. With that in mind you have to be playing it better and cleaner than the average employee because you already have two strikes against you. What have you personally done to change that perception. Do you think ALPA demands for respect are going to do anything? Respect and honor starts with your personal actions. Teamwork and professionalism are contagious.
Sounds fun. But at some point you've got to look at the ROI of the union actions. When it comes down to it, a strike is the only action that gain leverage.


Funny you should mention ignorance is bliss because that is what I think is going on here.
Of course you do, that is because you believe management and CEOs are patriarchs, the father figure and you do as your told, don't talk back and take what you are given.


What was the outcome of the Comair strike, the United strike, or going way back to the Eastern strike? Why should we expect a different result with Spirit? why because ALPA told you? Virtually every airlines labor relations have become nothing more than a Mexican standoff between pilots and management, despite how different the culture and business model of each airline is.
This is untrue. You simply know not what you speak of. There has been zero growth since 2001. Of course you blame ALPA, why would you blame the princes and captains of industry?


That is how ALPA has played it, us against them. Well that only works if the union is strong and face it unions are losing power so that is why ALPA would be willing to add five guys and a DC-8 or 20 guys flying Navajo's in the Yukon, strength in numbers. Problem is every pilot group is not the same, every companies management is not the same, so this ALPA "one size fits all" approach has further weakened the union. Management's gun in this Mexican standoff keeps getting bigger, while ours keeps getting smaller.
That is why each MEC is its own autonomous unit. It works well during growth and has its draw backs in recessions. However, most ALPA pilots like it this way. They don't want a Teamster set up.

What's your solution, add more Beech 1900 pilots, change the government, change the laws, change Washington, change public opinion? then we will get what we want. Wow sounds complicated.
I didn't say that. you did.


How about fostering teamwork among the people you see everyday asnd work toward building your airline so it grows and prospers because growth and profitability are usually the easiest way to get higher wages.
Let me make this excruciatingly clear to you. Pilots do not run Air Lines. Management loves to give guys like you the illusion that you are part of the "team". You buy into it. You love it.....

A pilots job is to safely fly the jet from point A to B. Nothing more or less.


How about presenting a company wide front to management that will have more impact than pilots at other airlines supporting your cause with kind words.
Because management will exploit it. They will let you believe that you are a part of their team.


Rez I think this is more important than wanking about politics all day.
When it comes to CBA's it is all about politics.



If you or others care to discuss this without insults, talking about right wingers, CIA death squads, or most of the other crap you like to talk about, I am all ears.
Yet you've just insulted me. No socialist comment?


Lets have a real discussion about us and ALPA and the future of our profession. How about some real self examination, where have we have failed, what we have done that isn't management's fault.
We just did. You've displayed fundamental beliefs that are exploitable by management. While you are not expected to be, not trying to be, nor will you ever be... however, you'd make a very poor pilot leader.


Then, and only then, do I think we will be able to move forward.
We? You are non union pilot for a corporation. Do you really have an interest in the Air Line Pilot Profession? If so, how and why?


I think we need a fundamental and radical change.
That change will be on CapHill and it is not going to happen. Democracy, what you quite possibly reject, is not about radical change. It is designed to prevent radicals from making change. This is a good thing on a macro level. Then again.. can you tell me why you'd know this?


The myopia has got to stop, we have to start dealing with how others perceive us, and the strength in numbers paradigm has run its course.
Us? You mean 'you'? Regardless, you are incredibly wrong. perception has value, but when it comes down to it, there are two forces that use for leverage: unity and govt support. As I said you wouldn't make a good pilot leader.


Say I am nuts or whatever but I got 30 years of proof showing the same old-same old, just bigger or louder, is still not working. If you can deny 30 years of history, then I am not the one who is nuts.
You are not nuts, just ignorant on the issues. You had an excellent opportunity to learn from the United pilots. They are about the best when it comes to defending and promoting the profession.

Curious what you profession activities have been and what sources you've read.

Yes or no.

Did you give to ALPA PAC?

Did you bring a resolution to your LEC?

Committee work? Committe chair? Elected Rep?

You say you get ALP magazine. There was recently a write up on the RLA and ALPA's work with industry and govt to study changes. Your thoughts?
 
Wow... amazing and hypocritical. What you are advocating here is the jetblue open door policy or what you have at your current employer. You are getting your lunch handed to you on this thread.... you're the small minority here so now it is described by you as no one welcomes your opinion and that is the root of the problems over the last 30 years. GMAFB.
Sometimes people hate to hear the truth. And I don't say its the truth just becuase I believe it, I got 30 years of history backing me up. If you can show me where ALPA tactics have demonstrated an unbridled chain of lasting success I wil have nothing to say. All I see is ALPA getting wekaer becuase it doesn't move forward.

You have already been told that Spirit pilots have tried to the SWA style of working with... it failed. Now the result is a possible strike. I started this thread to show solidarity with the Spirit pilots. The problem when you hook up to other labor groups is you start to negotiate with them whether you like it or not. Suddenly negotiation capital is lost because gains were made for another group. Sorry, when it comes to organized labor, ALPA is the best compared to others. ALPA's leverage would be other groups gain and Spirit pilots loss.
If you don't hang together you will hang seperately. These tactics make management's position stronger becuase now all they have to do is pit one group against another like United mgt. did with FA's and pilots or FA's and the IAM. I asked what do you think the outcome of a strike will be and gave my opinion. What are your thoughts.

Sounds fun. But at some point you've got to look at the ROI of the union actions. When it comes down to it, a strike is the only action that gain leverage.
What leverage, for how long, at what cost? You always ridicule me by saying you think the future is in the past. Well this sound like Samuel Gompers could have said it a 100 years ago.


Of course you do, that is because you believe management and CEOs are patriarchs, the father figure and you do as your told, don't talk back and take what you are given.
If I believed that I wouldn't care, and I wouldn't be here discussing this.

This is untrue. You simply know not what you speak of. There has been zero growth since 2001. Of course you blame ALPA, why would you blame the princes and captains of industry?
What LASTING positive things came out of thiose strikes. Why should we expect different results using the same tactics as before.


That is why each MEC is its own autonomous unit. It works well during growth and has its draw backs in recessions. However, most ALPA pilots like it this way. They don't want a Teamster set up.
Most MEC's usually speak for ALPA and feed ALPA's line to the pilots. If someone speaks up they usually get shouted down. Its not a very open atmosphere conducive to any opinion outside what you present here. Your open hostility only proves it. Other opinions or suggestion are not wanted or welcome.

Let me make this excruciatingly clear to you. Pilots do not run Air Lines. Management loves to give guys like you the illusion that you are part of the "team". You buy into it. You love it.....
They don't give me that illusion, the fact that I can't do my job without maint, FA's, ramp service, CS and so on and so on gives me that illusion.

A pilots job is to safely fly the jet from point A to B. Nothing more or less.
If that is how you operate, then you are not very good at what you do and I don't believe you really even think this way. You mean you don't care if you block out late, or you don't try to shave a few minutes off your flight time so people don't miss their connections. You don't pick altitudes and power settings to maxamize efficiency? These are all business decisions Rez. Our job includes, training, mentoring, managing, and decision making to maximize efficiency.

Because management will exploit it. They will let you believe that you are a part of their team.
So we should never do what we are supposed to do and be good at what we do because someone may exploit it. What an awful way to go through life. There is something called Karma you know, or as it says in the Bible, you shall reap what you sow.

We just did. You've displayed fundamental beliefs that are exploitable by management. While you are not expected to be, not trying to be, nor will you ever be... however, you'd make a very poor pilot leader.
This from the person who only need to get from A to B. Damn the consequences, I am doing the minimum.

We? You are non union pilot for a corporation. Do you really have an interest in the Air Line Pilot Profession? If so, how and why?
Yep, because I am still an airline pilot. I am as much of one as any furloughed guys who haven't flown since 2001. Will I ever go back to it, probably not, but I still have dozens of people I am concerned for and care about. I am tired of seeing people struggle and I feel I am in an excellent position to maybe say some things people don't want to hear, since I have nothing to lose. ALPA has set up a system where its nearly impossible to deviate from the company line so to speak, where guys have to suffer in silence. Who better to speak than somone who does not have to count on returning to an airline job, to speak for those ALPA wants to silence.

That change will be on CapHill and it is not going to happen. Democracy, what you quite possibly reject, is not about radical change. It is designed to prevent radicals from making change. This is a good thing on a macro level. Then again.. can you tell me why you'd know this?
Democracy is the ultimate form of radical change. ALPA can't continue like it is. Why is change on CapHill better than reform from within? From people who know our failures, and know where the bodies are buried. Are we too afraid to admit mistakes? Do we as an orgnization fear change that much that we are paralyzed to do anything different?


Us? You mean 'you'? Regardless, you are incredibly wrong. perception has value, but when it comes down to it, there are two forces that use for leverage: unity and govt support. As I said you wouldn't make a good pilot leader.
Its not just me . You can't believe with a pilot group of tens of thousands that there are not a lot of people that seek reform.


You are not nuts, just ignorant on the issues. You had an excellent opportunity to learn from the United pilots. They are about the best when it comes to defending and promoting the profession.
I learned for the United pilots. A lot of what I am saying is what I learned. United can't play well as a team so we suffered for it.

Curious what you profession activities have been and what sources you've read.

Yes or no.

Did you give to ALPA PAC?

Did you bring a resolution to your LEC?

Committee work? Committe chair? Elected Rep?
I had a grievence filed against me by the IAM for taking a bag off the jetway and bringing it downstairs. How is that for experience?
 
That is the funniest thing I have ever read in my entire life...full RLA protection, what a crock of pooh. The only thing the RLA does is protect management from labor walking off the job, the intent is to protect both sides with no changes is status quo but, as you know, we have had the rules changed on us more than once since we were protected by the full RLA protections...

401(k)
Wheel roll
4 days off

...please explain how the RLA protects us the labor?

Mike, please. I know you and I know you know better.

The RLA gives us at least the following two protections.

Grievance procedures that force the company to prove (in a court of law) charges against you. This effectively gives us a defense against unreasonable/arbitrary firing and/or discipline.

It forces the employer to follow formal discipline process.

The RLA provides an arbitration process if we feel wronged and can't work it out in grievance.

I spent most of my adult life working jobs where I could be fired with no reason, no less follow a formal procedure before doing so. Believe me, the system board, the grievance process, arbitration, and the right to council from your elected rep is worth a lot.

If you really don't like the RLA, quit and take a corporate job. Been there done that, I'll take RLA warts and all over a corporate "business card" Chief pilot ANY day.

BTW, all examples you mention are weak areas of the contract. Grey language in every case. Maybe you forgot the grievances we WON using the system. In every case where the language is clear and in our favor, we won. We lost wheel roll because the MEC allowed it for the early 321's. The company tried to get by with stealing our 4 days off in a row because the language is absolutely horrible. We finally beat them (using the RLA overseen Arbitration process) on the four day off deal because of negotiating notes from past contract negotiations and past practice. Non of which would have been possible without the RLA's arbitration process.
 
It is management's responsibility, something you've failed to learn.

Learning: a change in behavior as a result of experience.


Once again, the conservative blueprint and mindset comes out... corporations are good. CEOs= partiarch father figure... do as your told, don't talk back, be thankful for what you are given.


It's not conservatism. He's into corporatism, or maybe he's a NEOCon. I'm conservative, he's not.
 
Wow... amazing and hypocritical. What you are advocating here is the jetblue open door policy or what you have at your current employer. You are getting your lunch handed to you on this thread.... you're the small minority here so now it is described by you as no one welcomes your opinion and that is the root of the problems over the last 30 years. GMAFB.
Sometimes people hate to hear the truth. And I don't say its the truth just becuase I believe it, I got 30 years of history backing me up. If you can show me where ALPA tactics have demonstrated an unbridled chain of lasting success I wil have nothing to say. All I see is ALPA getting wekaer becuase it doesn't move forward.
Well you've don't like to hear the truth when it comes to neoliberal polices, which is related here... actually. Lasting success? Who stated that was ever the case? Where did you develop this exepcation? Who told you that lasting success was reality? Seriously, you need to go back to the drawing board. Let me guess... you went striaght from the MIL to UAL?

You have already been told that Spirit pilots have tried to the SWA style of working with... it failed. Now the result is a possible strike. I started this thread to show solidarity with the Spirit pilots. The problem when you hook up to other labor groups is you start to negotiate with them whether you like it or not. Suddenly negotiation capital is lost because gains were made for another group. Sorry, when it comes to organized labor, ALPA is the best compared to others. ALPA's leverage would be other groups gain and Spirit pilots loss.
If you don't hang together you will hang seperately. These tactics make management's position stronger becuase now all they have to do is pit one group against another like United mgt. did with FA's and pilots or FA's and the IAM. I asked what do you think the outcome of a strike will be and gave my opinion. What are your thoughts.
With the right politics in the WH and nmb and a well run MEC... the Spirit strike will be successful.


Sounds fun. But at some point you've got to look at the ROI of the union actions. When it comes down to it, a strike is the only action that gain leverage.
What leverage, for how long, at what cost? You always ridicule me by saying you think the future is in the past. Well this sound like Samuel Gompers could have said it a 100 years ago.
Yet it is. Until the company is shut down, but more importanly the pilots have the ear of the WH, not management, will the strike be successful.

Of course you do, that is because you believe management and CEOs are patriarchs, the father figure and you do as your told, don't talk back and take what you are given.
If I believed that I wouldn't care, and I wouldn't be here discussing this.
OF course.


This is untrue. You simply know not what you speak of. There has been zero growth since 2001. Of course you blame ALPA, why would you blame the princes and captains of industry?
What LASTING positive things came out of thiose strikes. Why should we expect different results using the same tactics as before.
I have already addressed this. Your expecation of lasting success is flawed. That is why there is a CBA.

That is why each MEC is its own autonomous unit. It works well during growth and has its draw backs in recessions. However, most ALPA pilots like it this way. They don't want a Teamster set up.
Most MEC's usually speak for ALPA and feed ALPA's line to the pilots. If someone speaks up they usually get shouted down. Its not a very open atmosphere conducive to any opinion outside what you present here. Your open hostility only proves it. Other opinions or suggestion are not wanted or welcome.
It depends on how you speak up. If you do it it like a rabid radical it only waste time. See, you have no idea how to function in a democractic organization. But why would you.. you went from your patriarch household growing up to the MIL and church. You were rarely asked what you thought, rather you were told what to do, when to do and be thankful for what you were given, even if it was crap, illegal or immoral. That is why unions are foreign to you... you can't use MIL law to order someone around, you have to build relationships, respect others and come up with a blended plan. Once that plan is agreed upon, you've got to show a solid front. This is very difficult if not impossible for guys like you.


Let me make this excruciatingly clear to you. Pilots do not run Air Lines. Management loves to give guys like you the illusion that you are part of the "team". You buy into it. You love it.....
They don't give me that illusion, the fact that I can't do my job without maint, FA's, ramp service, CS and so on and so on gives me that illusion.
Yet you anger ramp by violating thier contract. (see below).


A pilots job is to safely fly the jet from point A to B. Nothing more or less.
If that is how you operate, then you are not very good at what you do and I don't believe you really even think this way. You mean you don't care if you block out late, or you don't try to shave a few minutes off your flight time so people don't miss their connections. You don't pick altitudes and power settings to maxamize efficiency? These are all business decisions Rez. Our job includes, training, mentoring, managing, and decision making to maximize efficiency.
No they are not business decisions. They are operational decsisons. As the PIC I make those all the time. Again you show your ignorance. You think they are business decisions. Some tool in airline management told you on time, saviing gas, etc was a business choice and you believed them.
 
Because management will exploit it. They will let you believe that you are a part of their team.
So we should never do what we are supposed to do and be good at what we do because someone may exploit it. What an awful way to go through life. There is something called Karma you know, or as it says in the Bible, you shall reap what you sow.
You are losing the debate as shown by the fundamentals classic reversion to the Bible. God has nothing to do with this. Either you can debate intelligently on the issue or not. God can't help your ignorance. Only you can.


We just did. You've displayed fundamental beliefs that are exploitable by management. While you are not expected to be, not trying to be, nor will you ever be... however, you'd make a very poor pilot leader.
This from the person who only need to get from A to B. Damn the consequences, I am doing the minimum.
That is a false correlation on your part. I've gone above and beyond for the pax. I know the difference. I refuse to be a corporate tool.


We? You are non union pilot for a corporation. Do you really have an interest in the Air Line Pilot Profession? If so, how and why?
Yep, because I am still an airline pilot. I am as much of one as any furloughed guys who haven't flown since 2001. Will I ever go back to it, probably not, but I still have dozens of people I am concerned for and care about. I am tired of seeing people struggle and I feel I am in an excellent position to maybe say some things people don't want to hear, since I have nothing to lose. ALPA has set up a system where its nearly impossible to deviate from the company line so to speak, where guys have to suffer in silence. Who better to speak than somone who does not have to count on returning to an airline job, to speak for those ALPA wants to silence.
You need to shed your ignorance first. Seriously, you are so far removed from the labor movement and its ideals that you need to get 'trained and educated' if this is how you really believe. I think the pushback that you've gotten, not from me, but from so many on this thread is telling. Don't you? In addition, having a grievance filed against you is a bad stuff.



That change will be on CapHill and it is not going to happen. Democracy, what you quite possibly reject, is not about radical change. It is designed to prevent radicals from making change. This is a good thing on a macro level. Then again.. can you tell me why you'd know this?
Democracy is the ultimate form of radical change.
No it is not. Again, from someone who has never really functioned in a democracy you demonstrate again your failure to understand. Democracy is about stability. Revolution and activists movements is about radical change. Sure they can happen within a democratic system, but democracy is not radical.
ALPA can't continue like it is. Why is change on CapHill better than reform from within? From people who know our failures, and know where the bodies are buried. Are we too afraid to admit mistakes? Do we as an organization fear change that much that we are paralyzed to do anything different?

Are you serious? We have admitted our mistakes. What do you want ALPA members to be? Opus Dei? Self mutilating?

Everything that effects Air Line Pilots careers is determined politically. New higher regional pilots don't know this. You should.

But you are advocating that ALPA is paralyzed. What should be done to reverse this. What do you advocate? If you answer nothing else.. tell us what you think ALPA should do differently.. and how. Ideas are great but it is really the how.

Us? You mean 'you'? Regardless, you are incredibly wrong. perception has value, but when it comes down to it, there are two forces that use for leverage: unity and govt support. As I said you wouldn't make a good pilot leader.
Its not just me . You can't believe with a pilot group of tens of thousands that there are not a lot of people that seek reform.
Explain

You are not nuts, just ignorant on the issues. You had an excellent opportunity to learn from the United pilots. They are about the best when it comes to defending and promoting the profession.
I learned for the United pilots. A lot of what I am saying is what I learned. United can't play well as a team so we suffered for it.
No you did not. In addition there are UAL pilots that want UPA. You level of understanding is weak. Just read the replies from many others on this thread.


Curious what you profession activities have been and what sources you've read.

Yes or no.

Did you give to ALPA PAC?

Did you bring a resolution to your LEC?

Committee work? Committee chair? Elected Rep?
I had a grievance filed against me by the IAM for taking a bag off the jetway and bringing it downstairs. How is that for experience?

My new sig line.
 
Last edited:

Latest resources

Back
Top Bottom