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General,
My gripe is in the fact that ALPA leadership advised us to give up our bargaining rights because we were "assured" of a fair and equitable integration(see previous post from FDJ2).
You stuck your nose into the thread to raise the 65 issue so don't think the role your house is playing shouldn't be called out. If it passes I will certainly begrude your current leadership. This nation hardly prides itself on following the lead of other nations, so I doubt the ICAO decision would have made any noise if not for the lobby groups funded partly by your fabulous leadership. At least ALPA polled their membership and listened to majority rule. Can you say that for your union?
You are talking with one of the highest ranking flightinfo.com super senior members. Just because I added the fact that age 65 is coming, you girls get all upset. It appears some folks can't handle reality.
FI.COM Super Senior Member. (SSM) Highest ranking? Compared to what? I'll have to go to out to a Wal-Mart today and ask a greeter what the f*#k that means. Must be an impressive claim in the civilian ranks.
age 65 factored into that?
I really don't want to merge with anyone. But, IF WE HAD TO, then NW would be the best, hub wise, for DL.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Steenland will step down, but the other members of the EMT at NWA are young and want control over the roost. I expect Niel Cohen will run the merged carrier.The only way a merger with NWA for you would be good if ALL NWA management is left behind to rot on the vine. If ANY of them come along to the merged company may God help us all....They would keep pouring gasoline on you as you burn then once the fire burns out on its own and only then would they piss on you for good measure.
Steenland will step down, but the other members of the EMT at NWA are young and want control over the roost. I expect Niel Cohen will run the merged carrier.
Heyas,
I'm going to, um, have to disagree with the General there. CAL and NWA have many connections...most of which are not apparent from those peeking through the window.
It's important to note that NWA is NOT a publically traded company as is most other airlines. One group of stockholders, Gary Wilson and his buds, holds most of the stock....the remaining float is tiny. It doesn't matter if it is good or bad for the airline, only if it is good or bad for Gary will anything transpire.
Gary plays golf with those who control CAL, and all the money men involved in both are drinking buddies. Gary is still pissed that he didn't cash out to AMR back in 2000 with TWA was on the block and UAL/USAir was still the rage, and he's probably looking for the exit.
Here is the interesting twist...the MOST valuable (by far) part of NWA is the Pacific route system. BUT that part cannot be extricated from the rest of the airline. The pax and cargo rights are entertwined and only the NWA corporate entity may operate them. In any transaction, the surviving corporate entity MUST be NWA for those rights to continue.
Soooo, General...on the chance that a NWA/DAL deal goes through, how will it feel to be working for a corporate subsidiary of NWA? Sort of like, hmmm, I dunno, may the way Comair pilots must feel. Might want to ask one of them what it's like before you get too excited.
Nu
And, Did United have to keep Pan Am's name when they got their Asian routes? Nope. It could be worked out. Sure it could.
Soooo, General...on the chance that a NWA/DAL deal goes through, how will it feel to be working for a corporate subsidiary of NWA? Sort of like, hmmm, I dunno, may the way Comair pilots must feel.
Nu
Different treaties involved...Pan Am's rights were routes negotiated between the US and Japan, then awarded to PanAm. They were an entirely different situation.
NWA's fifth freedom rights involve an agreement directly with the Japanese Government and NWA that dates back to 1946. In essence, those rights allow NWA to operate as a Japanese Airline out of NRT, something no other air carrier in the world has, except Japanese 'domestic' airlines. Even the transactions involving the NRT routes are conducted in Yen through Japanese banks.
This is a subtle point that eludes even the most ardent Airliners.net poster. Many state that the 777 and 787 will make the NRT hub irrelevant, because US-Asia traffic will bypass it. The point, however, is that the NRT hub is called the Asian Interport for a reason...it is there to handle INTERASIAN traffic. The Asia-US traffic, while important, is NOT the primary revenue producer out of NRT. It is the destinations in the US that are spokes on the NRT hub, not the other way around.
Without the fifth freedom rights out of NRT, this ceases to be the case, and it simply becomes another marginal spoke.
The Japanese government has made it VERY clear that the routes are NOT negotiable items in any case, and the fifth freedom rights are tied directly to the NWA operating certificate.
Occam actually has the lowdown on the nitty gritty details. Suffice to say, if it was easy to spin off cargo or the Pacific from NWA, it would have been done long ago. The reason they're still a part of NWA is that they are basically inexerable from the airline. Even if you sold off every narrowbody (or most, NWA has some NB routes out of NRT) and all the non-Pacific widebodies (the 330-300), all you'd wind up with is a crippled international carrier with no domestic feed, who's rights drop dead if they are bought.
An interesting "poison pill" to say the least.
As for no west coast feed...I'm not sure a SLC hub would qualify in that regard. Besides, the west coast has ZERO pricing power with SWA and Frontier stomping up and down from SEA to Diego. You might as well run an intra-state service in FL or TX for all the good it will do you. You couldn't get worse yield if you flew from ATL-MCO....ooops, sorry....
Nu
I've heard the emancipation of CAL is for sale...
...if the price is right.