CWASaab
Well... Not anymore
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2002
- Posts
- 122
mjs said:... But do you really expect them to spend their negotiating capital to protect the airlinks? ...
Well, foolish optimist that I tend to be, yeah. Why else would they have been blowing so much brand scope, red tail family smoke up our rear ends? If they kept telling us how much they supported us and how the red tail family was going to be different, better, than the rest because of our support for each other, but never intended to back any of that up with meaningful action, then I guess I feel even more sold out than before. How is an Airlink pilot ever to trust or believe the NWA MEC or pilot group again?
mjs said:...What if they took additional pay cuts as a trade to protect the airlinks, then 9E, starts flying for other carriers, then 9E decides they do not want to fly for NWA any more? Or either of them filed chapt. 7? Or NWA terminates their contract with either one?
I am not asking the NWA pilots to take any cuts or suffer in any way for Airlinkers. The NWA MEC are the ones that have been beating the brand scope drum. I just don't want to hear anymore of this rah-rah brand scope, were a big family BS from Duane, the NWA MEC or any mainline pilot unless they actually back it up in action, when it counts.
If 9E were to start flying for other carriers, I think NWA would benefit, as I believe they still hold considerable shares in the spun-off company. For the same reason I think it is totally unrealistic to think that 9E, or XJ for that matter, would ever walk away from NWA. There is just way too much cross contamination, from the board rooms down through management for that to ever happen as a result of 9E or XJ initiative.
Now, if NWA wanted to end the relationship that is another matter. They can take their planes and go home, just like they did during the XJ negotiations. To think that NWA would allow 9E or XJ to use those subleased planes to make money for anybody else is a real stretch. Heck, NWA wouldn't even let XJ go out and buy their own cargo Saabs to make money on the side.
It is also a stretch that either 9E or XJ file for bankruptcy, under any chapter. We both know that the current Airlink Agreements do a fine job of making sure that XJ or 9E keep enough of the money to report some profits. And to think that NWA would let one of the two disappear, through bankruptcy or by NWA kicking one out, is incorrect. Why would NWA ever put all its Easter eggs in one basket? It should be obvious now that NWA wants more, not fewer, chances to use the whipsaw. And the NWA MEC and pilots have obliged.
Bottom line: I don't want to hear any more altruistic crap when the truth is NWA pilots are only going to look out for themselves and only intend to look out for themselves.
Not that there is anything wrong with that.
mjs said:...I guess my point is, this business is really unstable. It would not be wise to spend negotiating capital on things that are out of their control.
MS
I don't know anything about the plight of the NWA FAs and their dues check off, so I can't comment on that, but I will say that if you think that this is beyond the control of NWA pilots, it may be. But only because they are unwilling to bare the costs (negotiating capital) and believe it to be so (resignation). The NWA pilots have had this type of control in the past. The agreements with both Continental and Delta required pilot approval to become real. The marketing agreement with Alaska requires exemption from scope, as does Horizon's operation of Q400s and CRJ700s. The NWA pilots have the tightest hold of scope, and who their company can partner with, amongst their peers. And despite what they have said in the past about brand scope and the red tail family, only the NWA pilots will benefit as they negotiate away anything that protected XJ or 9E.
Not that there is anything wrong with that, the industry certainly is unstable.
edited: for spelling, more than once. I really need a better proof reader.
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