Lear,
I've been hearing on the line a lot (80%) of "we probably should have passed TA2". I've been trying to make my case that we are still better off with what we currently have. Scope to me seems like the big issue, but I'd like hear your thoughts.
If you have the time, how about a few quick points of what life could be like if we voted in TA2 in these trying times. I've heard several guys are saying to their co-pilots "you cost me several thousand dollars". Weak. Times like these we really need to stay on the same page and united.
Thanks in advance and looking forward to seeing you and Don L. back on the line soon.
Thanks, I appreciate it.
T.A. 2 pay was an increase of 3% to 7%, depending on the seat you were in. You got that by selling the junior pilots down the river and giving up Quality-Of-Life items for everyone, but mostly the junior pilots and the retirees got thrown under the bus.
Reserve would be hell and the pay that reserves enjoy now would be a thing of the past. More ready reserve at the airport and even out-of-domicile reserve sitting in one of our "deluxe" hotels in some city somewhere with no car, no food options except Waffle House in many locations, with only the regular reserve daily rate being paid. Not to mention the "carrot" of "home reserve" never had to be actually assigned to any pilots.
Retirees would have received a FRACTION of their health benefits and at COBRA rates for most of them, not to mention health premiums AND copays would have been subject to LARGE increases above current book.
New-hires would have received a 20% pay CUT. I keep waiting for someone to post on here responding to one of those Captains who is b*tching about "costing them money", saying something similar to, "So you LIKE screwing your former coworkers who have retired, your current junior Captains on reserve, AND you LIKE the fact that you were going to STEAL that money you aren't getting from the new-hire F/O's? Wow, I want to be just like you someday."
I'm not even going to START talking about the possibilities of job losses due to Scope give-backs. Ornstein would LOVE to get a piece of airTran flying with as much money as he's losing...
I could go on, but those greedy bastards who are saying that have a convenient way of forgetting at whose expense those pay raises would have come from.
'Nuff said.
p.s. I don't particularly like that we are backing down in front of the mediator already. If the company pulls out, then that's their own fault, and we should immediately file for release into self-help. The pilots WERE ready to take things to the mat, but I believe that momentum has been completely lost at this point and will take a LOT to be rebuilt.