One question? Didn't the AT MEC know that the 717 was going to go away sometime soon? If so why not prep your people for it. You people (AT) knew it was going away.
No, we didn't. I have every single email chain between the NC and MEC for the last 9 months, and I can tell you, beyond a shadow of a doubt, we were told, again and again and AGAIN by SWA management, that there WAS no plan to retire the 717's early. Yes, I have those emails too, up to just 60 days ago they were still saying that.
I was the first person to email the reps back in March and say, "What they're saying isn't matching with what they're doing; here's the rumors from several different reliable sources at Boeing, Delta, etc, as well as what they're doing with the 717 training hiatus and 737 movements, it points to the 717 going away sooner rather than later, and we'd better start developing some contingency plans". Some of the reps disagreed, but the majority (and the new MEC Chair) agreed, so we started developing plans, but that's just been in the last 45 days.
Which makes the email from Steve Chase very interesting from a legal point of view. SWAPA says they've known from the very beginning the 717's were going to go away quickly. Yet our internal emails between the NC, MC, and MEC all quite obviously point to the fact that we were NOT told that. Your emails from SWA management officials to us (I have some of those, too) repeatedly, as recently as 60 days ago, that there was NO plan for the early departure of the 717 but, if something came up, they would "certainly look at it."
So SWAPA is saying they knew the plan back in negotiations and we know WE didn't... so did SWA tell SWAPA their plan for early 717 retirement and capturing more CA seats? Sure sounds like it from the Steve Chase letter.
Did the 717 capts magically think that they would have been a capt past 2015.
Yes, and it wasn't "magical", it was because that's what the SIA said. There were pages and pages of what happened with the 717's as they crossed the partition and ONE, ITTY BITTY little entry on what happens if they're not there to transition into.
Since day one I have looked at the global seniority and where I would stand with one fleet.
Me too, and it sucked, so I was glad the 717's were staying. From the beginning I was planning on bidding BACK to the 717 once they came across the partition so I could get SOME of my seniority back on a monthly bidding basis. But back in March it became obvious (to me) that wasn't going to happen...
What I see is a ATL base opening on the SWA side next 12 months, and the draw down of the AT base. So when you bid to come to SWA, you bid right back into ATL and fly what your Seniority can hold.
I see the same thing, but that was going to happen anyway.
The problem is that the majority of the international flying focus is shifting to MCO and Texas/California, where we aren't competing head-to-head with Delta. I doubt the ATL base will be much bigger than the DEN base when all is said and done. How many of your senior pilots will take those slots and how many will be left for the 30% or so of our pilots who live in ATL?
This thing is about 5 layers deep in a domino effect. What seems easy on the surface really has implications way beyond first glance.