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I think that's wishful thinking at this point. You got a good deal offered in good faith and the likelihood of getting the same deal or better in arbitration is minimal.
Your merger committee didn't come prepared to iron out a seniority list, it showed up to posture for advantage and has potentially squandered a rare opportunity. You need new blood in that committee and I think you know that.
There are only a handful of years when NWA retirements have an impact, thereafter its mostly DAL retirements.
Relative seniority for an airline receiving significantly greater contractual improvements than the company they are merging with and significantly greater access to premium paying wide bodied flying as a result of the merger is a good deal and one an arbitrator is unlikely to match.
On a percentage basis you are over twice as likely to be a DAL wide bodied captain than a NWA wide bodied captain. DAL has a significant advantage in wide bodied airframes and pay across the entire fleet.
Not many arbitrators have taken a seniorty bump 5-10 years out into consideration lately. Talk to our friends at AAA and they'll tell you how that worked out for them. Counting wide bodied air frames vs narrow bodied airframes and the contractual values brought to the merger have been given significantly greater weight.
Hopefully at this point they'll be no merger, if there is and we go down the traditional path a handful of pilots who have been in your committee for far too long will have squandered an unprecendented opportunity, for significant contractual improvements and upfront incentives, rolling the dice on a process that with all likelihhod will not yield a better outcome than what was offered.
Here's where our team probably has an advantage. We have 22 years of experience wrasslin' on merger issues in front of arbitrators. Which arbitrators?
All of them!
Probably a moot point since Atlanta radio is reporting both companies are walking away from the deal but,
Would the arbitrator make his decision then the companies decide if the merger is worth it or would the merger occur first?
Would the pilot groups still get equity and contract improvements without a negotiated settlement?
Concur. Like I said elsewhere for our fratricidal group to unanimously reject with the contractual goodies on the table, the SLI had to be really bad.I also think it's lame to think that guys as sharp as your leadership would open with a "final offer".
Hang in there, brother! It ain't over. The two sides will still have a chance to act like grown-ups and settle this.
So they should just be happy being Delta pilots?
You can't be a DAL wide body captain if there are no vacancies. There will be many wide body vacancies at NWA in the coming years, there will not be many wide body vacancies at DAL in the coming years.
REALLY? We are expanding and getting more widebodies. There are plenty of vaccancies, as long as we get more airplanes and expand to INTL destinations. We are doing just that. How many more 777 Captains will be needed for just the 6 777LRs we will get within a 3 month period early next year alone?
In the only recent SLI case an arbitrator has seen (USAir/AWA), the arbitrator took the seniority bump USAir pilots were expecting into account by instituting a five year fence where AWA pilots couldn't bid for USAir wide bodies. Of course the flaw in this is the age 65 rule was instituted shortly after the ruling, effectively wiping out the fence.
The solution in my opinion is a blended seniority list with a 10 year period where vacancies on caused by attrition would be filled by pilots of the legacy companies seniority list. In other words, vacancies caused by an NWA retirement would be filled by a current NWA pilot and vacancies caused by a DAL retirement would be filled by a DAL pilot. Growth aircraft would be staffed by whomever could hold the seat and displaced pilots get the first shot back at their former seat.
Their former seat? On the DC9? What if it goes away? Then what? How about the 742?
I suspect NWA pilots are saying something similar.
In the only recent SLI case an arbitrator has seen (USAir/AWA), the arbitrator took the seniority bump USAir pilots were expecting into account by instituting a five year fence where AWA pilots couldn't bid for USAir wide bodies. Of course the flaw in this is the age 65 rule was instituted shortly after the ruling, effectively wiping out the fence.
Kinda like the US Airways east.........They've done a good job of never succesfully negotiating an outcome in the two decades they've held office, so they've always been able to blame an arbitrator. I guess that's the key to longevity in your committee, passing the buck and never taking ownership of a result.
I think you are on to something. What is the track record of the team sent to the table? 26 arbitrations and 0 (zero) agreements, since the DOH SLI under Roberts. Am I mistaken? Might as well send Genghis Kahn to the table.Welllllll, I'd prefer to see negotiators in there instead of arbitration experts...
Our team showed up to get the best deal they could. I think your's did too.
Do not underestimate the ability of the Delta pilots to prepare and present an arbitration. The skills are fairly elementary and 90% of success is doing your homework and coming prepared. The NWA team will not be going up against NWA management, or another aggrieved pilot. The Delta pilots have a reputation that has been honestly earned.Here's where our team probably has an advantage. We have 22 years of experience wrasslin' on merger issues in front of arbitrators. Which arbitrators?
All of them!
Define "advance." By the posts by NWA pilots on this board "advance" means the ability to increase seniority against their peers at Delta, or at a minimum increase % seniority standing amongst the group as NWA pilots retire.From what I understand, neither side is disputing the math of the retirement projections. The issue is where to place pilots on the list so that all will have an relatively equal mathematical opportunity to advance.
That is changing quick with the new 777's that require dual crews for the flying that they will be doingYour "captains-per-hull" ratio is lower than ours by about 20% in the widebody categories.
All agreed. I'd rather beat up on them than have you and I beating up on each other.
- I concur that this opportunity is rare. In fact, I believe the scope and uniqueness of this opportunity makes it a good deal for both pilot groups,
- If we chose to deconstruct the contracts, I think you'd see a complimentary blend of goodies.
- The biggest selling point to settling this like adults is because both sides would lose control of this issue as soon as it goes to arbitration! We can influence the result as long as we are in control. Sending it to an arbitrator is to give up ANY control over the outcome....It also signals to the world that pilots are petulant morons.
- I hope it happens. I think the opportunity is unprecedented. I also think it's lame to think that guys as sharp as your leadership would open with a "final offer". They can move. We can move. The deal can get done.
- Then we'll crush American, United, USAirways, and Continental like baby harp seals!
Kinda like the US Airways east.........
737
When it concerns the NWALPA spin, its more like fiction!On "average" if NWA/DAL went DOH (which will never happen) NWA pilots would be 8-10% more senior on the combined list. "hardly a windfall". Do you know how many proposals DALPA has given to NWAALPA? Most people would be SHOCKED at the answer.
Stapling the bottom 3000 Delta pilots to the bottom of the list shows how arrogant you are!USAir was weeks away from LIQUIDATION before the merger with AWA.
Comparing NWA to USair shows how ignorant you are.
On this we can agree!:beer:Have fun going at it alone. NWA will be just fine.
On "average" if NWA/DAL went DOH (which will never happen) NWA pilots would be 8-10% more senior on the combined list. "hardly a windfall".
Do you know how many proposals DALPA has given to NWAALPA? Most people would be SHOCKED at the answer.
Again, it depends on what that seniority will get you. If it gets you an upgrade from a -9 to a 777 (which it would on the FO side) that's a pretty significant windfall.On "average" if NWA/DAL went DOH (which will never happen) NWA pilots would be 8-10% more senior on the combined list. "hardly a windfall". Do you know how many proposals DALPA has given to NWAALPA? Most people would be SHOCKED at the answer.