PBRstreetgang
Registered Abuser
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2002
- Posts
- 3,241
Genny,PBR,
WRONG. It is all about what is NEGOTIATED. If Dalpa wanted to fly all 50 seaters, they could negotiate that. IF they wanted to only fly 744s and furlough everyone else (not a popular one I bet), then it could be negotiated. Everything is on the table when negotiated. You guys at SkyWest don't know about that since you don't have a normal union, but rather one that is infultrated by management people. Really, it is the union's flying if it is negotiated that way. I don't know how many more times I have to state it for you. It might be costly to negotiate, but that is how it works. A Legacy doesn't have to deal with the groups from it's connection partners, but eventually they have to deal with their own pilots.
Bye Bye--General Lee
You continue to make my point, you are right the flying is "yours" while the contract is in force and until amended.
I will ask one more time, HOW MUCH ARE YOU PERSONALLY WILLING TO PAY TO GET THE RJ FLYING. Dot, period, how much per hour in pay or benefits? 10.00 per hour? One day less off per month, how much, you want it, they know it, and its all about bargaining. How much will your 777/747 guys pony up?
You know I work at SKYW, I am pretty sure I know as much about their strengths and shortcomings from the inside as you do and I am sure you know as much about working there as I know about working at DAL.
I am old enough to know about business and the economy, so the lack of real world experience that the guys I work with is telling. I have negotiated contracts and had them legally enforced in court. There is a real disconnect between pilots today and the real world of business as practiced by their employers. There is no "we" in business, there is the business owners and the employees, each has very separate agendas. The very pilots you disparage will soon be your F/Os, because the FAA issued very few Commercial Certificates last year and if you look at major airline planned retirement matrix compared to pilot certificate issuance there is gonna be a choke point downstream, and you might ask how will they fill the void. AbIntro is less than 10 years away, look at UAL in the '60s.
PBR