StaySeated
IBT does not represent ME
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2001
- Posts
- 782
Originally Posted by StaySeated
There was also a Voluntary Leave of Absence agreement. Over 60 pilots agreed to VLOA's, most of which traveled overseas to fly in Asia and various sandbox carriers. Had these 60 folks not taken VLOA's, another 60 would have been furloughed. The 60 VLOA's that returned from VLOA were senior to the folks that were furloughed, and they returned in seniority order. No one returned out of seniority, and no "back room" deals were struck.
More like 20 went to the sandbox, India and other Asian countries. Your figure is not even close, unless the other 40 got a job within the US (very unlikely). But the interest to take a VLOA was five times as high, had the company not set an unrealistic deadline to "take it or leave it within only a few weeks", there fore not giving interested pilots enough time to find or secure another job. Another deal breaker for many F9 pilots in regard to VLOA were terms such as not a guaranteed recall for six years (vacancy is not a guarantee). Many, many more would have taken a VLOA with more flexible terms and many furloughs could have been avoided. Yet there was no genuine interest by the company to make this happen.
I said 60 VLOA's and 60 Furloughs, but now that you called me out I had to go back and check the actual numbers.....drum roll please....
46 VLOA's and 50 Furloughs. (would you like employee numbers, DOH?)
I was pretty close, and my point was that every single VLOA prevented a furlough, and none of the VLOA's took a vacancy away from a furloughed pilot.
Regarding the rest of your post, I 100% agree. The VLOA language was not perfect, and one gentlemen in management made it a point to block a number of FAPA's furlough mitigation efforts. More than one pilot was forced to resign when this person denied numerous leave requests. Ironically, this same person gave himself a long term "personal leave of absence" so he could accept another job and keep his name on the seniority list "just in case". He recently left the company, but Indianapolis is like some greek mythological creature, when one duplicitous VP leaves, two more take his place.