Relic01
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2001
- Posts
- 72
Wesb737fo,
Thanks for the support. We need more guys like yourself. For someone to discredit my knowledge on the subject because of my flight time is funny. I still would like to know how PHXFLYR got to where he is. I'm sure he never worked at some regional, dealing with many of the same things the pilot group is dealing with at Mesa, and many of the other regional out there. Or did he and he has a selective memory? Hey buddy, anyone can put down 18,500 hours on their profile. Hopefully, when I have that much time, I'll be in the left seat at a major and offering guys aspiring to be where I am, positive criticisms.
Its ironic that he blames Mesa for whats happening to air whiskey, however Skywest and GoJet are the ones picking up their flying. Where is the blame for management selling out their pilots? How can they invest $125 million in US but could not work something out with UA. They saw what happened to ACA but took no actions. Two of my best friends work at air whiskey and I feel for those guys and would never want to be in that position.
The industry is evolving and those who will remain are the ones who are financially disciplined, offer the lowest cost, and are able to react quickly to market changes. I was a management intern at US in the early 2000's and speak to any US pilot, they found ways to exploit that airline and work rules were written that were absurd. A pilot bids for vacation, if the first and the last days of vacation touch a trip, he gets paid vacation and for both trips. I knew guys who worked 2 weeks during the summer by bidding vacation, days off with sick time in between. There are many more examples. Management and labor are both to blame for the problems at airways. I don't blame southwest for having lower cost. That's what is all comes down to. The consumer wanting to pay less for more. How is walmart kicking everyone else around? If airways had the same cost as southwest in 2003, they would have been the most profitable airline ever. When i say cost, i'm just speaking of labor but everything else.
Back to Mesa, we have enough money to adequately compensate our employees, pay industry average on per diem, and honor our contract. These are the things alpa and our mec are going after. Also, there is a head start on the 2007 contract negotiations. I'm looking forward to this as are many of my co-workers. We have our issues and are working to rectify them but we can only be responsible for our own.
Thanks for the support. We need more guys like yourself. For someone to discredit my knowledge on the subject because of my flight time is funny. I still would like to know how PHXFLYR got to where he is. I'm sure he never worked at some regional, dealing with many of the same things the pilot group is dealing with at Mesa, and many of the other regional out there. Or did he and he has a selective memory? Hey buddy, anyone can put down 18,500 hours on their profile. Hopefully, when I have that much time, I'll be in the left seat at a major and offering guys aspiring to be where I am, positive criticisms.
Its ironic that he blames Mesa for whats happening to air whiskey, however Skywest and GoJet are the ones picking up their flying. Where is the blame for management selling out their pilots? How can they invest $125 million in US but could not work something out with UA. They saw what happened to ACA but took no actions. Two of my best friends work at air whiskey and I feel for those guys and would never want to be in that position.
The industry is evolving and those who will remain are the ones who are financially disciplined, offer the lowest cost, and are able to react quickly to market changes. I was a management intern at US in the early 2000's and speak to any US pilot, they found ways to exploit that airline and work rules were written that were absurd. A pilot bids for vacation, if the first and the last days of vacation touch a trip, he gets paid vacation and for both trips. I knew guys who worked 2 weeks during the summer by bidding vacation, days off with sick time in between. There are many more examples. Management and labor are both to blame for the problems at airways. I don't blame southwest for having lower cost. That's what is all comes down to. The consumer wanting to pay less for more. How is walmart kicking everyone else around? If airways had the same cost as southwest in 2003, they would have been the most profitable airline ever. When i say cost, i'm just speaking of labor but everything else.
Back to Mesa, we have enough money to adequately compensate our employees, pay industry average on per diem, and honor our contract. These are the things alpa and our mec are going after. Also, there is a head start on the 2007 contract negotiations. I'm looking forward to this as are many of my co-workers. We have our issues and are working to rectify them but we can only be responsible for our own.