grog_sit_reserv
Crashcave Lounger
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2003
- Posts
- 1,070
From ALPA in case you don't get this thru normal distribution:
1. What has happened lately?
Since the ALPA Rice Committee’s first report a few weeks ago, its members and Captain Prater have visited with East and West pilots; ALPA has received the results of polling conducted by the Wilson Center for Public Research; and the Rice Committee has continued to meet with each pilot group’s representatives to discuss both career advancement issues and contract negotiations. Pilot participation in the telephone polling was very high. Thanks to everyone who took the time to meet with us and talk to the Wilson Center.
2. What are pilots saying?
The meetings and polling provide clear guidance: the vast majority of East pilots want career advancement, economic gains, and quality-of-life improvements—not just a remote chance to overturn the Nicolau award. West pilots, while frustrated by the slow pace of developments, understand that a new contract to replace the one negotiated under ATSB constraints is the key to their futures, too.
3. Does ALPA support East as well as West pilots?
Yes. While ALPA’s Executive Council decisions last week did not adopt the East MEC positions, the Executive Council actions not only were required by ALPA Merger Policy, they also set out the only realistic way to achieve the goals outlined by a majority of pilots on both the East and West. In plain terms, they are to provide career advancement and obtain significant gains for all US Airways pilots—not frustrate East pilots’ desires.
One of the Executive Council’s decisions was to direct the resumption of joint negotiations. Resources and MCF funding were approved to support these activities. Joint negotiations, once resumed, can achieve both parity and parity plus within the process. ALPA National did not withdraw funds; East leadership declined to let their negotiators participate in the joint bargaining process for which the funds were authorized. We have asked the East MEC to reverse its effort to impose pre-conditions on the JNC process and to actively participate in the joint negotiations. If you are an East pilot, we need your help to make that happen.
4. What is ALPA’s plan?
The Rice Committee and the ALPA Executive Council believe there is a clear path within ALPA to career advancement, economic gain, and quality-of-life improvements for all US Airways pilots. More specifically, pay parity can be obtained by negotiating jointly with West pilots who have already voiced their support for retroactive application of common pay rates. Completed sections—yes, completed sections—of the new contract clearly confirm that substantial economic and quality-of-life improvements will be a reality. Those improvements, along with ideas being discussed in the Rice Committee, address both the career advancement and the economic goals laid out by both pilot groups.
5. Do pilots who want to replace ALPA have a plan?
You’ll find that pilots who advocate changing unions are suggesting something like building your entire football game plan around a last-second “Hail Mary” pass. Rather than focusing bargaining on the economic improvement that East Airways pilots and their families deserve and need, they argue for endless litigation over the Nicolau award with a slim to no chance of success, long periods where nothing happens, and, regardless of the outcome in court, years of your continued cheap labor while a new organization tries to unify itself, build resources, and negotiate changes in seniority with management. All the while, you’ll work longer under a bankruptcy-era or ATSB contract with diminished quality of life.
6. Can pilots who want to replace ALPA deliver?
Even if those pilots unveil a plan, can it be executed without the money, staff, and pilot unity that will be sorely lacking in a new organization? How will they fund their work when dues check-off for half of the pilot group is canceled and West pilots sue the union? Do you believe rumors that management will bargain with you over seniority changes and expose the corporation to years of litigation and potentially massive damages claims from West pilots? If management does so, won’t they ask for hundreds of millions from your pocket to protect against their litigation risk and to achieve a competitive advantage over costs at other airlines?
Some East pilots have said that they won’t “sell” their seniority. Those who advocate leaving ALPA had better start planning on how they will “buy” it from management.
7. Is ALPA’s plan realistic?
Other pilot groups are negotiating in the new economic environment, advancing their careers and helping their families recover from bankruptcy and ATSB hell. United pilots have a newly improved short- and long-call reserve system and more days off for reserves. Northwest pilots just negotiated premium pay and recovered deadhead pay at 100% instead of 50%. Delta pilots will be getting a pay bump on January 1, 2008. Alaska, Hawaiian, Continental, American, and Southwest pilots are bargaining changes to their contracts in a negotiating environment that looks more like the early years of this decade when US Airways pilots got pay rate increases totaling over 33%.
Without careful analysis and deliberate decision-making about the future, US Airways pilots (East and West) will miss this entire bargaining cycle and be frozen in time.
But it doesn’t have to be that way.