Livin in the past....
Haa! Airways already tried this, remember the 190s? They can't even do that right.
"We'll be happy to accept crappy pay for these shiney new planes, We can worry about improving that little stuff later. It's just important that they come here."
Then they got all kinds of pats on the back for taking a stand and stopping the outsourcing.
Now, the kicker is, they negotiated wages similar to, and even in some cases less than what is in our ratty old contract, signed when we didn't even know what a 190 was. So our management can tell us NOW in negotiations "why do you need more? You're making as much or more than legacy captains. Ok, we'll bump the FO pay up a bit but you captains are doing just fine. Jetblue? They're not a legacy, don't worry about those rates."
In summary, they took planes, took crappy rates, flew at those crappy rates, sell planes to regional in contract negotiations, then whine about the regional screwing up the industry.
Hey, maybe you can keep the planes on property by offering up concessions, ya know, to "raise the bar".
As if the majors of long ago didn't sell out our careers enough....
You all just continue to live in the past. What happened in the 80's, 90's, and 00's, while great fireside fingerpointing chat, is useless on how to fix the situation now.
The babyboomers have left us with one F'd up industry for pilots, mostly with a me, me, me mentality. Actually, most of the economy suffers from the same ills. Our economy doesn't participate in capitlism as much as it does outsourcing. Labor is seen as a commodity, not a fixed cost.
The above points address what is wrong if the "majors" try to capture any flying back at this point. The wage disparity is so vast, that no company is going to agree to pay 30% more for the same service that they can now outsource for a discount. We need to have a national strategy to bring the bottom up, then incorporate the bottom back into the industry.
Our only national leverage is the ability for the substandard pay companies to be limited on their ability to get their crews to and from work. If skybus can find 300 pilots who are living in CMH to staff their airline next time it starts up, then so be it, but it will be hard for any company to achieve growth as a blacklisted company.
What is the point of the National Union, except for the legislation part, if they are not willing to set a standard for entry?
Everyone is so mired in the past that they can't conceive of a future where things are different, they would rather just assign blame and then commute to their job. Just an observation.
MDCU just likes to dig at AWA whenever possible.
Regional lifer captains like to assign blame to the majors for their creation (yes, it's true..... that ship has sailed)
Encouraging the majors to "undercut" the regionals to get the planes "on property" is exactly the wrong approach in my opinion. No ONE group can effect a change, it has to be done nationally!