Your lawsuit attempts to eliminate all scope language that limits what you may fly at your code-share airline. Since mainline jobs are protected by that scope language. eliminating it would in effect "steal" those jobs from the mainline pilots.
No Sir, you are wrong. The RJDC would make scope stronger and much more effective if they win. Let me explain.
Scope should be negotiated by ALPA with the participation of the ALPA members who's jobs and working conditions are being negotiated. In practice, when all of this began in 2000, scope should have been negotiated with the participation of all ALPA members performing Delta flying. (at the time SkyWest flew 11 aircraft for Delta and ACA pulled itself out of the codeshare with I-Air) This would not have harmed the Delta pilots, but at the same time, ASA and Comair pilots could have had effective scope, if all participating ALPA members were represented at the table. Instead, the Delta pilots shut out the Connection guys, sold their flying down the river and thus far the non-union carriers are wining the resulting race for the bottom.
ALPA even warmed up to the idea of "brand scope" which was somewhat similar - however, National refused to lead the large predatory MEC's to the table to work with the Connection carriers. Worse, the mainline MEC's began negotiating "bargaining credits" for RFP's and Pay Cuts at Connection Carriers with data supplied by ALPA's own Economic and Financial Analysis Department.
PCL - You and I can probably agree that ALPA needs to come at scope in a coordinated fashion. If ALPA would do so, they could take back flying from non union carriers (which would compel them to join ALPA). An ALPA that allows all members to participate will be stronger. In fact, if ALPA members as a whole decide flying needs to return to mainline (which I think would be best for the employers and the employees) this is how we get that accomplished.
The lawsuit wants to force the renegotiation of scope to bring ALPA's practice in line with its fiduciary duty to its membership. If we have good ideas, but no way to implement them, then the good ideas are worthless. If the lawsuit prevails, there has to be a mechanism to force a correction of past mistakes.
PCL, you, like me, want to restore this profession and you are a true patriot. Our difference is that I want to force change and you want to let ALPA follow its own internal mechanisms. You can be reassured by the fact that once all ALPA members are allowed to participate, then it is up to ALPA members where this union goes. The RJDC can't (and does not want to) control the union - all they want is a system which allows all members equal representation.
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