bluejuice787
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2005
- Posts
- 226
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Frontier is a great place to work while your looking for another job...
Good luck with that.
Lynx is finally up and running, but only after draining $25Million from F9 Holdings. How long will it take for 10 Q400's to generate $25Million? The answer to that question is another question. Why would the company spend $25 million to start a holding company and then start another op certificate? Answer, Lynx will be flying 20+ EMB170/175 by 2010. Just conjecture on my part, but eventually Holdings will feed itself and there will be no more fee for departure agreements with republic, ex jet, horizon, et al. On paper, the lynx abomination isn't such a bad idea, except if you are a frontier pilot hoping to progress up the seniority list.
Frontier is a great place to work, I just hope the "great place" continues to exist.
Both being under Frontier Holdings gives the F9 pilot a bunch of leverage to integrate Lynx further, to avoid a whipsaw.
Well, Lynx will allow F9 to get some premium tickets to SBS, ASE, JAC and EGE that to date it has been leaving on the table. It will also allow F9 to zero yield a number of cities that WN now flies like ABQ.
Exactly how? I don't see what you're trying to point out. Where does this leverage come from? Yes, Lynx is under the same umbrella but on a separate certificate and seniority list. Where does this leverage you speak of come from. If they had leverage and wished to even try to use it then Lynx wouldn't be under a separate certificate and and list in the first place.
As of right now, there is nothing that stops every 318 from becoming a Lynx aircraft other than the FAA certification process. There isn't anything I know of in the F9 contract (of which I know almost nothing, which won't stop me from commenting on it) that stops the company from painting operated by Lynx Aviation on the side of the 318s, and telling the F9 guys "Lynx is hiring Airbus pilots at X per hour."
Unbelievable. As crappy as scope is at most major airlines these days, there are still limitations placed upon the size of aircraft done by their affilates/regionals. Maybe more Frontier pilots could weigh in but I think most would find it unacceptable if for example Skywest started flying B737's in the Delta network.
Ace,
I understand what you are getting at, but it's not going to be possible here. Lynx is a separate company, with a separate operating certificate, so the union cross over will not work...now if they want to get their own union then by all means let them do it, but they will not be covered under the F9 union.
And you are right, there is nothing that stops the 318's or 319's from being flown by Lynx.