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quote:
"It is sad that you and those who think like you are obviously disinterested in finding any solutions to the problems we face. "


The way I see it, there is NO solution to this current problem.

As long as you have separate employee groups, with separate and vastly different contracts, being represented by the same union, and both trying to obtain the same jobs, it will never work.

And the cry of "one list" to fix this is a dream. No airline management in this country is ever going to allow one list between mainline and regional. They stand to lose too much. And no employee group out there has the negotiating leverage to demand one list.

This is no different than any other situation in this country. There is always going to be a winner and loser. No way around it.

If the rjdc wins, that means Dalpa lost. Does that mean they can then turn around and sue alpa themselves because they are now losing jobs to you, an alpa carrier??
 
JohnDoe said:
quote:

The way I see it, there is NO solution to this current problem.
There will always be those of us who see the glass as half empty and others who see it as half full.

I not only think there is a solution, I think there are several viable options. However, we can't ever find solutions if we don't first acknowledge problems.
Additionally, recognizing the existence of a problem is not enough, we must also want to solve it.

Attempts have been made to solve the problem already; unfortunately none of them have worked. One such attempt is the ever changing scope clause, which morphed from a legitimate vehicle designed to protect work, to a illegitimate vehicle designed to prevent work by others, prevent the operation of certain aircraft types and transfer work from one group to another. That has failed miserably.

From there we went (at the same time) to promoting "flow-throughs" as the panacea that would solve everything. It didn't, mainly because we invented a need to negotiate with each other, when we really needed to negotiate with the Company. Additionally, we created grossly unbalanced systems in favor of one group, and we arbitrarily decided to use this vehicle as furlough protection. Might over right on the part of the kings and naivete on the part of the dogs caused this idea to fail too.

Then we went to "Jets for Jobs", yet another scheme designed not to resolve problems but to favor some of us over others of us. An attempt to legitimize the theft of seniority and impose dictatorial policy by outright coercion and subterfuge. Some think it is working but in fact it is not. What could have been turned into an equitable solution has been made into little more than a revelation of treachery on the part of our National Union. A black mark on its very soul.

Now we're talking about "brand scope", yet another means of attempting to obscure the problem by giving one group of the favored control of the other group of the less favored. Doomed to failure for the same reasons, i.e., it's not really a solution, it's an attempt at maintaining the status quo. Keep the problem alive as long as I come out on top. A perfect example of the famous quotation "Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely." - G. B. Shaw.

Have any of us ever genuinely chosen to sit down with each other and even try to work out a viable solution? NO, not on your life. Until we do, none will be found.

There are solutions out there, some better than others but solutions nonetheless. The powers that be are so drunk with their perceived power and the desire to keep it that they don't want a real solution. So, instead of talking with each other we talk to each other. Much is said but little is heard and even less is listened to.

We will not find the solutions in that way, even if they are handed to us on a silver platter. Truth is half of us want a solution (the under dogs) but the other half does not (the kings of the hill). Meanwhile the situation continues to deteriorate and the kings don't realize that their kingdoms are crumbling. By the time they no longer have kingdoms to rule over it will be too late for solutions, and the biggest losers will not be the dogs, it will be the kings.

As long as you have separate employee groups, with separate and vastly different contracts, being represented by the same union, and both trying to obtain the same jobs, it will never work.
I do not agree. You are taking the position that the problem is beyond resolution, just as you did above. As long as you believe that, you are probably correct. "It takes two to tango." The fact that we have separate employee groups and separate contracts is an obstacle, but it is one that can be overcome. We have to want to do that; at present, one of the parties does not. That is why we can't get over this obstacle. "Where there's a will there's a way."

When we agree to sit down with each other as equals and chose the best option from among available remedies, we will find the solution best applicable to each of the related groups. The soulution may not be the same in every affiliated group, for one size does not fit all, but each of the affiliated groups can find an equitable balance, if they want to. Right now the kings do not want to, they are more interested in being kings. Keep that up and they will eventually be kings without kingdoms. "I have seen the emperor without his clothes."

And the cry of "one list" to fix this is a dream. No airline management in this country is ever going to allow one list between mainline and regional. They stand to lose too much. And no employee group out there has the negotiating leverage to demand one list.
I agree with you on that. Even if the kings and the dogs in fact wanted "one list", which no king does, the third party is the real Emperor and will not agree. We waste time pursueing this option, it is not viable.

This is no different than any other situation in this country. There is always going to be a winner and loser. No way around it.
We disagree again. You're the pessimist, I'm the optimist. There does not have to be a winner and a loser in this situation. The win/win solutions are out there, but they all require compromise on both sides. As long as the kings remain uncompromising, nothing will happen and the day of reckoning I predict will come to pass.

If the rjdc wins, that means Dalpa lost. Does that mean they can then turn around and sue alpa themselves because they are now losing jobs to you, an alpa carrier??
This should not be about the RJDC "winning" and the ALPA losing, nor vice versa. As for Dalpa, that is not an entity of import. In fact it is not an entity at all. The problem extends far beyond them. The problem that we need to solve affects all "mainline" and all "regional" groups. It is not limited to the DAL/ASA/CMR groups. This is a problem within the ALPA as a whole. Delta pilots are but one of the many players as are ASA and Comair. Neither the universe nor the union revolves around those three airlines, only one of which thinks that it does.

This is an ALPA-wide problem and it needs an ALPA-wide solution. Solving it at Delta and keeping it going at NWA, AAA, UAL and CAL, is not the answer. There are already lawsuits related to AAA with more to come. If the subject of this thread is realized, there will be more related to NWA, etc.

If the RJDC "wins" it won't win against Dalpa, it will win against the ALPA, Int'l. and everyone will be affected. This should not have to come to that. In my opinion we do not need a "victory". What we need is an equitable settlement of the issues that divide us, variations of which can be applied to all carriers.

I'm a dreamer, but I'm also a pragmatist. 'The meaning of conceptions is to be sought in their practical bearings, the function of thought is to guide action, and truth is preeminently to be tested by the practical consequences of belief.' -- C.S. Pierce & William James
 
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Ok.......so what exactly are some of these "viable options," as you say, to the problem??

I'll admit I may be missing the explanations of them (especially if they are hidden in 40 paragraph responses lol), but so far it seems the only thing I have seen are all the cries of "there is a problem and we don't like it, you are hurting our growth, the union is screwing us, so we have to sue."

And please don't get into what the problems are. It should be evident from my post that I agree there are problems. I am looking for the "proposed solutions" that you say are viable.
 
surplus1 said:
FDJ2,

In classic form your focus has returned to proving who is right without regard to what is right.
No Surplus, I was just once again pointing out how wrong your assertions are. I made no comment, I just quoted the legal standards you either are unaware of, or choose to ignore.
 
FDJ2 said:
surplus1 said:
FDJ2,

In classic form your focus has returned to proving who is right without regard to what is right.
No Surplus, I was just once again pointing out how wrong your assertions are. I made no comment, I just quoted the legal standards you either are unaware of, or choose to ignore.

FDJ2, you quoted legal standards. Surplus said that whether or not ALPA wins based on those legal standards, there will still be a problem within ALPA. Surplus is correct. There are almost 4000 ASA and CMR pilots. Regardless of how the litigation goes, don't expect us to be subservient to you. If we combine with Eagle, ALG/PDT/PSA, XJT, TSA, ARW, INDYAIR, Mesa, Mesaba, and PCL you are looking at an alliance of almost 20,000 ALPA pilots that could cause problems within ALPA if you continue with the current direction. The litigation will go forward it appears. Even if ALPA wins this round, don't expect the problem to disappear.
 
InclusiveScope said:
FDJ2, you quoted legal standards. Surplus said that whether or not ALPA wins based on those legal standards, there will still be a problem within ALPA. Surplus is correct. There are almost 4000 ASA and CMR pilots. Regardless of how the litigation goes, don't expect us to be subservient to you. If we combine with Eagle, ALG/PDT/PSA, XJT, TSA, ARW, INDYAIR, Mesa, Mesaba, and PCL you are looking at an alliance of almost 20,000 ALPA pilots that could cause problems within ALPA if you continue with the current direction. The litigation will go forward it appears. Even if ALPA wins this round, don't expect the problem to disappear.


There will always be problems but not because real problems exist but rather problems existing in some irrational minds. These problems will never go away.

Even if you were successful in splitting off your own "regional" union you shouldn't just expect the other regional carriers to knock down your door to get in. Doubtful you would get even half of those 20,000 you mentioned. Lets see, average wage of 10,000 regional pilots($40K)/1.95% is about $7.8 million/year. That's your entire operating budget for all your carriers and a national committee structure. A lousy 7.8 million. I hope you get some good volunteers that enjoy giving all their days off to the Union because your not going to be able to afford flight pay loss at any of your carriers. Good Luck!!!
 
JohnDoe said:
Ok.......so what exactly are some of these "viable options," as you say, to the problem??

I'll admit I may be missing the explanations of them (especially if they are hidden in 40 paragraph responses lol), but so far it seems the only thing I have seen are all the cries of "there is a problem and we don't like it, you are hurting our growth, the union is screwing us, so we have to sue."

And please don't get into what the problems are. It should be evident from my post that I agree there are problems. I am looking for the "proposed solutions" that you say are viable.
Well, I just spent nearly two hours writing down one possible solution, then lost it before I could post it. Sorry, I'll try again tomorrow.
 
DoinTime said:
Even if you were successful in splitting off your own "regional" union you shouldn't just expect the other regional carriers to knock down your door to get in. Doubtful you would get even half of those 20,000 you mentioned. Lets see, average wage of 10,000 regional pilots($40K)/1.95% is about $7.8 million/year. That's your entire operating budget for all your carriers and a national committee structure. A lousy 7.8 million. I hope you get some good volunteers that enjoy giving all their days off to the Union because your not going to be able to afford flight pay loss at any of your carriers. Good Luck!!!
You have put words into Inclusive Scope's mouth, so to speak. He said nothing about leaving the ALPA.

Although getting us to leave the union is the wet dream of our adversaries and their supporters, don't hold your breath. That isn't going to happen. We are not going to leave. We are going to continue to fight you from within until we prevail. We are here for the duration. If the union implodes, it will either go out of business or the majors will be the one's that leave. Delta already threatens to do that whenever they don't get their way. We're used to it.

On the financial end however, it could easily be done. For starters, we would not need a President who earns more than the President of the USA. We would not need lawyers many of whose salaries exceed your MEC annual budget by a very wide margin. We sould not have to meet in Washington's most expensive hotels or hold millon dollar rubber-stamp parties on Miami Beach. We would not need chauffered limousines, and we would not have to pay a bunch of pilots making $200 - $300 per hour flight pay loss to sit on do-nothing committes and talk about their military adventures. We would get lots of "good volunteers" in exchage for lots of featherbedders that we have now. We would not need a dozen Executive Vice Presidents, with lavish expense accounts and huge bar bills. We would not have to pay millions in damages for failing to represent members, nor would we have to bail-out high dollar MEC Chairmen that get in trouble with the tax laws or pay off lawyers trying to take payola out of ESOPS. We could meet in the Holiday Inn, instead of the Hyatt Regency and we could drink beer, instead of fine wines and Champagne. Who knows, maybe we could make it on $8 million bucks.

Don't lose any sleep over it though, we aren't leaving. It's much easier to hold your feet to the fire from within where we just might get the whole 20,000, even without counting you.

What we can't do today we will do tomorrow. That much you can count on. I have a feeling you're going to be Doin Time for a lot longer than you think so get used to having us around.
 
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InclusiveScope said:
Even if ALPA wins this round, don't expect the problem to disappear.
Even? It's not even close. The courts recognize that unions need a wide latitude in their conduct and that the courts must be very differential to unions in their actions. The standard is, that the actions must be so outside the range of reasonableness as to be irrational. Given the fact that the mainline MECs have controlling language in their PWAs and given the fact that when given the opportunity to outsource the work to cheaper labor management's record has been to consistently outsource 100% of what it can, it is hardly irrational to have protective mechanisms in place in mainline contracts to preserve the job opportunities of the mainline pilots.

Surplus and the rest of the RJDC proponents do a relatively good job of makiing declarations devoid of any facts and spinning rhetoric, but at the end of the day that is all it is, empty rhetoric.
 
Bottom Line: Management will make their NUT Share Holders will make their NUT

If the Nut gets impinged upon then someone is taking concessions in the labor group

And Yes Guy, All though we think of our selves as gods, so far above the common rampy we are part of the labor group. I say this because this is the way we are looked at by management, A COST!!!!!

If the NUT gets unachievable or not expectable, Then we look at chapter 11. The Gov. has made it to easy for the airlines to file. 44 Billion Dollars in Loan guarantees and had cash. That is what the Gov. does for an airline coming out of BK. The nut that I speak of is “Profit Margin”



NWA is not going to give the crj70 to mainline pilots. The NUT is not there. You Say” but the main line guys will fly at market rates.” Have you hard any other NWA labor groups( Ramp, Ground ,Mech., FA, say they will drop their rates. No and I don’t think will.

PRODICTION: NWA will hold there options on the crj70/ Mainline pilots will use this to get all they want Out of NWA in a contract more airbuses for retired dc-9s, pay, bennies, better looking FA’s etc../ NWA will then out sorce the crj70 Because the scope will be change to allow 70 seat flying. Which will screw us all, and we will be working for nothing forever……

 
Tank Commander said:
Bottom Line:

PRODICTION: NWA will hold there options on the crj70/ Mainline pilots will use this to get all they want Out of NWA in a contract more airbuses for retired dc-9s, pay, bennies, better looking FA’s etc../ NWA will then out sorce the crj70 Because the scope will be change to allow 70 seat flying. Which will screw us all, and we will be working for nothing forever……

Better looking hags at NWA no freaking way man MGMT likes 'em the uglier the better because they know how much the pilots hate that.
 

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