B19 Flyer
....
- Joined
- May 8, 2006
- Posts
- 1,595
Actually, I never made a threat, and I haven't really participated in the "Safety Based" preflight discussion. Simply an observation of how a fraction works compared to an airline. I hope it never gets this far, but when the pilots of an airline goes on strike, the company chops back the schedule as needed until they can get the scabs trained and ready. A fractional can't do that because they don't determine the schedule. We both know they would have to charter aircraft to fly their owners around, Even if only half of the pilots walked out during a strike, and the company planned on staffing to a minimum, it would still take quite a while to train another 100 to 150 pilots. Could the company even find enough charter aircraft? If they could, could they afford to? I don't think they would survive for very long. How many of the present owners would want to continually cross picket lines to fly with Flops? Could you attract any new owners with all the bad press and picket lines? These people aren't flying fractional because it is the cheap way to go. So like said before, Wake up, and get real. This isn't the airlines!
You can debate whether we need a union all you want, but the fact remains that we have one...by the choice of the majority of the pilots, I might add. Look how well the union works at Southwest. When the management works with the union instead of against it, good things come of it. Why is that so hard for you to accept that? I won't sit here at my keyboard and tell you that everything union is great, but we have already tried it the other way, and look where it got us. Are you really so narrow minded that anything union has to be bad?
A strike has the same effect on a fractional as well as a scheduled carrier. They cripple the company and cost the carrier revenue.
Next, don't use and/or compare the SWA contract with anything in the industry. It was a ten year deal based on profit sharing, the only one like it. and I can assure you that it won't be repeated as they new members of the union are already showing a leaning toward a regular contract so they can get their money up front rather than through profit sharing. It was indeed a smart contract from both points of view.
It's clear that you don't see the overall effect a union has on the COMPANY as a complete entity.
You think a union is there to pad your paycheck. There is nothing a union will add if the same people involved in the union put the same effort into the company as management.
Why is it that the exact same people that are "effective" in a union, are so ineffective outside of a union working for the same company?