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The SWA name is. We didn't buy seats, we bought a airline. Fair and square is the price that your ceo took. Don't forget. BF and the shareholders sold you guys.
M/B was the saving grace. It saved a lot of job loss and headache. Expecially in a crappy economy. I just hope the AT folks see the value in this. I know I do. I have a family too.
What we are saying is any aircraft that has SWA on it, a SWA pilot should be flying it.
All I can say is every AT folk that I have meet has been awesome. Hopefully there is a big azz elephant in the room that will allow for some type of certainty overall.
To answer your question, a 12th year FO at SWA currently makes $132.84/trip x 90 trips min reserve = 11,956/mo or about $144k per year. That's the minimum. An FO with 10 years or more of seniority is very senior, and can easily work his schedule to fly 130 or more trips/month with little effort and still no more (or not much more) than 15 days worked per month (what a reserve works for his 90 trips). Pushing $200k is very common for a senior FO.
I realize that this doesn't change a seat displacement, but I hope it helps by addressing your question. I'm like you: I'd rather be a bottom-feeding captain than a uber-senior FO, although the reality is that there's not a whole lot of difference at Southwest between the pay of a reserve captain and a crafty, senior FO.
Bubba
Thanks! My commute on SWA has been a really positive experience since we shut down DFW. Just got To get through these choppy waters.
Lear, a plan is just that, a plan. An old saying, "Plans never make it past first contact with the enemy".
I just haven't seen (AA/TWA, US/AWA, DAL/NWA, UAL/CAL or any regional airline integration) where the smaller airline loses all their captain seats. I know you are junior and didn't sign up for this mess. This 717 thing could have been handled better. I think SWA used the 717 for negotiation leverage with Boeing and the large Max order. They couln't just tip their cards in May/June and tell us the 717s were going to be history very quickly. They had to keep it vague. So they pissed off some pilots in return for getting a good deal on airplanes. That's what I call just business in the airline industry. Not the emotional crap.
There we go, thanks. Here's the fun part:Pending any period of separate operation prior to operational merger and integration of collective bargaining agreements and pilot seniority lists, which shall be no longer than twenty-four (24) months, unless mutually agreed upon by the Company and the Association, the successor shall keep separate the flight operations of the carriers and will not transfer or interchange crews, equipment and/or routes between the carriers unless otherwise negotiated and agreed to by the Association, and shall ensure that all Company aircraft on hand or on order at the time of the transaction are operated only by pilots on the Southwest Airlines’ Master Pilot Seniority List.