acarpe3448
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2002
- Posts
- 647
Thats great, good for Surplus1. But I think I do have somewhat of a right to be a little upset. Try furlough for two years, try loosing your house, try living on $700 a month state unemployment for 5 months, try supporting a family of three on that amount of money. Try watching over 1000 of your airline's pilots furloughed for years and watching ASA and Comair get over a billion dollars worth of new aircraft, watch Comair and ASA hire around 1000 pilots and have Comair refuse to even think about a Delta pilot flying right seat based on stupid political garbage. I find it very difficult to see how Delta scope has done any damage to the careers of your pilots. Was it Comair's contract that paid them more than anyone else, was it the massive number of new airplanes that you all have received, was it the growth and stability that you all enjoy. Don't talk to me about credibility when I hear non stop about the RJDC objectives. It's some of this groups credibility that I question. The RJDC is trying to get equal treatment with ALPA. That great! I support you all the way. You are trying to cut certain parts from all scope clauses, mainly what size of aircraft and howmany of them you can fly. But I have yet to hear from the RJDC to admit what the end result will be. Delta transfering more and more flying over to connection. You all will fly far cheaper, and expect far fewer benefits. Delta management would love that. But what will your objective lead to? Mainline shrinking and shrinking until all we do is international, and you all get the rest. That is truly warped thinking. I have heard the argument that if we got rid of scope or merged than none of our pilots would be furloughed. I agree. But I for one do not want to go back to the right seat of a CRJ for low wages. Don't get me wrong, the CRJ is a very cool jet, and all of the connection pilots are every bit of an airline pilot as anyone at Delta. The point is I want growth at Mainline, I want jobs at Mainline for as many ASA pilots as we can get. The problem in my eyes is that you all can not begin to understand what will happen if we follow this path. The continued shrinking of mainline airlines, the continued drop in the value of a longterm airline pilot career, and the eventual outsourcing of all our jobs to pilots from India or China where they are willing to fly that awsome CRJ for minimum wage and a green card. Think about from all sides.