OldManPilot said:
I am not sure what you mean by "give up your seniority". All J4J pilots (cpt or f/o) remain in their seniority position in all U bases they serve. Thus any pilot senior on the seniority list when they upgrade go ahead of all the J4J Captains.
I'll try to explain what you don't seem to understand. When a pilot, hired after another pilot, is permitted to occupy a left seat before the pilot that was hired first, you have relinquished your seniority. The fact that this "captain" has a higher number is irrelevant. His number can't hold the seat that he occupies unless you give up you seniority rights to him. Every left seat occupied by a J4J pilot is a left seat that should have been occupied by the more senior CHQ pilot. If you don't see that as giving up your seniority, then you don't understand the meaning of seniority. A "number" on the list has no value if you cannot use it.
How do you make up for the loss in pay suffered by the "senior" CHQ pilot who was forced to give up the left seat to a junior U pilot? If he has to wait another year to upgrade because his slot is occupied by a U pilot, how much money does that cost him?
Also what J4J did was allow us to grow and it also allowed us to help pilots out of work. How can you keep bashing that?
Do you really expect me to believe that you accepted J4J because you wanted to "help U pilots" by screwing your own pilots? Like you said,
you sold the seniority and the upgrades of your junior pilots for growth. If it walks like a duck .... you know the rest.
You were, in effect, forced to do it because the U pilots screwed you by making your company create an alter ego airline. How much money do you think that cost every CHQ pilot when you were forced to accept a lesser contract to stop the alter ego?
After the alter ego (Republic) was created I agree that you had to do something to stop it. However, the fact remains that ALPA and the U pilots cost you and the pilots of every other airline they forced that crap on, to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars in pay. The ONLY thing that saved some of you was the fact that most U pilots didn't accept the jobs that you were forced to give them with super seniority.
It was a win - win situation for CHQ pilots and unemployed U pilots.
Perhaps you think J4J was a win-win deal. I think it was one of the greatest injustices ever perpetrated by a labor union, against other union pilots most of whom, unlike you guys at CHQ, were represented by the same union (ALPA). They played you for suckers (along with a whole lot of other regional pilots).
The Mesa pilots were the first to buy that BS. Why, because they had to deal with an alter ego as well. They blame the few pilots that went to Freedom but the truth is there would never have been a Freedom were it not for ALPA's irrational scope and the J4J garbage. The successful Freedom gambit resulted in the follow up of Republic and the latest copy called GJ. The U pilots have screwed every regional they had a chance to: PDT, ALG, PSA, MES, TSA and you.
ALPA now wails against GJ and it should but that doesn't change the fact that there would have been no Freedom, no Republic and no GJ were it not for the actions of ALPA and the copy-cat APA. These alter ego monsters are the Frankensteins of ALPA's creation.
Our J4J deal is for 32 airframes which will include most if not all the MDA 170's. Again this is a win-win for CHQ/RP pilots, and at least 50% of MDA pilots.
It's a win for your company to buy those airplanes, gates, etc. Smart move on the part of your management. It is also a win for the U pilots if they get half of the seats, especially the captain slots. It is not a win for CHQ/RP pilots if you have to give away 1/2 of the resulting captain positions. That is a loss for you no matter how you spin it.
I have no objection at all to your company offering to hire U pilots from MDA in preference to pilots off the street. It would be a very nice gesture if you could get Bedford to do that. However, when you are obliged to give them 50% of the captain vacancies that result from the purchase of airplanes, by your company, they are screwing you and you are allowing yourselves to be screwed. That's exactly what you did with J4J. Preferential hiring - no problem. Super seniority = lousy deal for you, win for them.
This most recent acquisition of MDA airplanes is not a merger and it is not the acquisition of another airline. It is a simple sale of assets by a bankrupt company and the purchase of those assets by a healthy company.
I do feel sorry for the U pilots affected. But, they are not entitled to anything because of it. Why don't you ask those U pilots how many rEAL pilots they agreed to hire when their company bought the 757's from EAL? I'm sorry, but they deserve no more than they gave when they were in the drivers seat in a very similar situation, i.e., nothing. When we don't learn from history it repeats itself.
As for the fellow that made reference to an arbitrator --- there is no arbitrator in an asset sale. There's nothing to arbitrate; this is not a merger, and even if it was, the very best they could expect would be Allegheny/Mohawk since you do not belong to the same union.
If we vote to allow more than 32 airframes when that time comes, more MDA pilots will get jobs as well.
You can vote for whatever you choose as I'm sure you will. If you want to hire all the MDA pilots and they accept the job, that's fine and would be nice. However, not one of them should get a left seat in preference to any Republic/CHQ pilot who is qualified to upgrade. Vote for that and it just makes you a sucker twice.
So please before you bash CHQ/RP/S5 again, explain how your company has helped Furloughed U pilots.
My company hired lots of furloughed pilots, some of which came from U and some from several other airlines. In fact most furloughed pilots that chose to apply were hired. All of them got numbers based on their DOH with my airline. Not one of them got a captain's seat in preference to any of our own pilots. We feel no remorse whatever because of that. That's how the system is supposed to work and that is how it did work.
We asked our company to give preference to furloughed pilots in its hiring and our company did. Those that wanted and expected preferential treatment did not get it. ALL furloughed pilots that we hired were treated equally, regardless of their previous place of employment. That some thought they had a "right" to preferential treatment is their problem, not ours. Nobody has any more "right" at our airline than we have at their airline.
Do you actually believe that if we had been furloughed any one of them was going to give any one of us a captain's seat out of seniority? The answer to that is not no, it is he!! NO and we both know it. We would not expect that and they should not expect it either. Evidently you folks (and several others like you) don't seem to understand that.
When you talk about win-win it means that I give you equal value for what you give me. In this case U pilots are not giving you anything. Your company is not buying these airplanes with their money. Therefore, if you give them your captain seats it is win-lose, and you are the losers. That makes no sense to me.
Remember: You don't get paid what your worth, you get paid what you negotiate!
With that I agree completely. I don't have a problem with what you are paid, you did the best you could.
I do have a problem with the J4J stuff and I think you got "taken to the cleaners" on that deal. So did everyone else that agreed to it. Either you're completely naive or you were completely outsmarted. In this zoo, sometimes you have to give up some pay to keep your flying. I don't like it, but that's how it is. Once somebody caves, the dominoes take effect. Nevertheless, nobody with a brain should ever give up the benefits of his seniority unless there is a merger.
Just my opinion.