Just shooting from the hip here, but I think that most airline employee groups seem to be overly afraid of having a contract imposed upon them (in bankruptcy). So afraid, that they are "negotiating" horrible contracts that should have never seen the light of day. Maybe I am missing something, but what is the big deal? You have a horrible contract for a year or two? Ironically, not striking when a contract is imposed is more dangerous to management (and the company) than striking.
Lets use the Northwest flight attendants as an example. Lets say that the NWA flight attendants openly claim that they will not strike when the contract is imposed and will wait until the first day the company exits bankruptcy (or at first legal opportunity). What would you think as an airline executive? How are you going to get investors? How are you going to raise exit financing?
The end game is that the airline management would need to negotiate in good faith (sooner or later), or the company will liquidate. We need to be stronger as a labor group. Stop the insanity of negotiating while in bankruptcy just to save face of having an imposed contract. I am not a bankruptcy expert, but I think it is debatable whether an imposed contract would even be valid after the company exits bankruptcy. Has this ever been tested in the courts?
Northwest would much rather have the flight attendants go on a half-assed strike and break the union. Just as they did to the mechanics (Although I respect the mechanics for their courage). Or better yet, they would like the union to approve a crappy contract. Even though the contract that would have been imposed was EQUALLY crappy.
Lets use the Northwest flight attendants as an example. Lets say that the NWA flight attendants openly claim that they will not strike when the contract is imposed and will wait until the first day the company exits bankruptcy (or at first legal opportunity). What would you think as an airline executive? How are you going to get investors? How are you going to raise exit financing?
The end game is that the airline management would need to negotiate in good faith (sooner or later), or the company will liquidate. We need to be stronger as a labor group. Stop the insanity of negotiating while in bankruptcy just to save face of having an imposed contract. I am not a bankruptcy expert, but I think it is debatable whether an imposed contract would even be valid after the company exits bankruptcy. Has this ever been tested in the courts?
Northwest would much rather have the flight attendants go on a half-assed strike and break the union. Just as they did to the mechanics (Although I respect the mechanics for their courage). Or better yet, they would like the union to approve a crappy contract. Even though the contract that would have been imposed was EQUALLY crappy.
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