Fozzy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2001
- Posts
- 889
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Hawkered said:Small companies always compare what they're offering to avoid losing their training costs and staff to large corporations. If NJA gets a big raise, the whole industry will benefit enormously!
Netjets has been accused of holding down GA salaries for years too, and unfortunately that's true too!
Fozzy said:bump to the top
Okay, how about we leave all these company trolls to themselves. Just stop posting here. Untill this contract is done, this is the only type of post you will see from me. Give them nothing.
Stop posting, you are not helping.
netjetwife said:2000Flyer, as you say, you are on the outside, so not really qualified to judge whether or not the majority of NJ pilots do believe they are helping the industry by fighting for professional treatment. The evidence of that assertion is seen in the frequency of posts on the ASAP board, expressing that opinion. While it isn't the primary motive of the majority, that doesn't mean it isn't stated as just one more reason that the pilots must stand their ground. The pilots are very unified and calls for the "greater good" are heard constantly.
old*art said:2000Flyer ... for clarification only .... "We - not the shiny airplanes - are the NJ product" - The "WE" was meant as rhetorical but - yes - referring to the pilots, as the owners do not interact with the dispatchers, mechanics, schedulers, flight managers or any of the other outstanding support folks we have working with us at Netjets. The pilot force is the face of Netjets, and it is getting a little tired and haggard looking. The rest of your post is opinion, to which you are certainly entitled. I will say however that I have never flown with a more outstanding group of folks than the pilots here at Netjets.
This is the first thing that I think of when I think of unions. This sums up my experience with the teamsters perfectly.h25b said:It's the typical union shop situation at work. They think a union helps them, but in reality it slows everything down. Marching around in circles, ranting and raving, and passing out "informational" leaflets to customers always makes management want to give their employees a raise as fast as possible, right ???
This is a good question. If this theory really works, it should work both ways.Ace-of-the-Base said:I just don't get your logic: If raising the salaries of thousands of pilots (us) didn't raise yours, why do you thing that raising yours will raise everyon elses?
A lot of unioneers do talk this way, although I wonder if they were given the choice of a 45% raise for themselves, or a 25% raise for all pilots of similar machines, or all employees in their company - casino, dispatch, etc., which they'd choose.2000flyer said:I have never held a job where I take a pay raise by saying, thinking, or feeling that I've personally helped all other segments salary issues. A byproduct of my salary may be a benefit for others but I have never asked for a pay raise "to help others earn more" in a given industry.
Fozzy said:bump to the top
Okay, how about we leave all these company trolls to themselves. Just stop posting here. Untill this contract is done, this is the only type of post you will see from me. Give them nothing.
Stop posting, you are not helping.
Gulfstream 200 said:Paranoia sets in...
the cockpits are bugged....the Rudys catering is poisioned....
Secret Society move undeground. Dont look at anyone, use secret handshakes and invisible ink.
netjetwife said:I beg to differ with you, 2000. My husband and I frequently mention the fact that his efforts are in support of 2000 + pilots/families, NOT just our own.
netjetwife said:... No one is saying that the "rising tide" idea is THE primary motivator. Rather, it is mentioned as another on a long list of good reasons to fight for what is right. As always, it is about more than money, but I think that you got the right idea from the phrase--professional treatment.
old*art said:...Most of the NJA pilots are trying to fill the glass for everyone in aviation - not just themselves...
netjetwife said:...it is shared by many who are giving up countless hours.
netjetwife said:Naturally, a pilot's first responsibility/concern is his/her family, next would come their fellow pilots in the union, and then in the industry. QUOTE]
Used to be God, Country and Corps. - now it is Family, Union, Industry.
netjetwife said:Naturally, a pilot's first responsibility/concern is his/her family, next would come their fellow pilots in the union, and then in the industry. I think this is a logical order that would fit most of the NJ pilots.