PBS is in the current contract, see Section 25.
Four days off can be guaranteed with pref bid if the pilot group demands it.
Four days off is not the QOL life saver that you think it is.
Crediting 43 hours over guarantee only guarantees that you will be expected to continue to work for slave wages. Think status quo, and no I'm not calling for a moratorium on OT.
please do us all a favor and cease telling management that you'll be happy with small gains. Some of us are working our arses off trying to get you up to industry average. Current wages at Spirit are not "a little low" in comparison to industry average. Total compensation at Spirit is a lot low, so low that it will take us fives times the gain that the industry expects just to get us up to where the industry is NOW.
PBS is not currently being utilized; it can be explored by a company/ALPA joint venture if so requested.
As for the 4-day-off guarantee: show me a way I can GUARANTEE I'll be home for ample amounts of time between trips, and I'm all ears. There are lots of ways to build a good schedule (ask a SWA or FedEx guy); I simply view the 4-day-off rule as my protection from lazy crew planners.
While I'll admit I'm uninformed about the details of a PBS system, I'm not opposed to looking in to it. All I have to go by are a few Continental friends (and not all are junior); so far, they hate it and claim that ALPA will have to spend lots of time and negotiating power to get rid of it/fix it. Not what I want to hear about the ride report ahead, you know?
The reason I pointed out my credit is to show that soft time is easy to come by. 115 credit hours to fly less than 75? Still with 15 days off? 2-3 legs a day, tops? Wise up, man, that ain't bad. Of course I'd like a higher hourly wage (I've already said that), but going off our current contract, that's the only way for me to make a descent paycheck.
As for compensation, I did the following (thanks airlinepilotcentral.com):
I took 5-, 7-, 10-, and top-year payscales for Captains on either A320 or B737 at the following carriers: AirTran, Alaska, Frontier, JetBlue, United, and America West (the AWA contract rate; higher than USAir). They ranged from 6.5 to 10.0% higher than our Captain rates.
That's what I meant by "a little low"--an average of 8.25%.
Now, before you bash me as a management-lover, be realistic. Do you really think we're going to go from "worst to first" in one contract? I don't. I do realize that many of the above payscales are from "concessionary" contracts, so we have to take the current upswing (is it?) into account, but come on. Our guys are not going to find themselves looking down at everyone from the top of the heap. Even with a dress and makeup, a pig is still a pig.
I assume by "total compensation package", you mean retirement as well. Again...sure, I'd love to see an increase in our 100%-up-to-8% 401k company contribution; heck, I'd really like a B-fund! But, really, are we going to get the farm? I'm in my early 30s...and I am not counting on the airline industry to pay my retirement...just like I don't count on social security to be around. Hey, I don't like that attitude either, but I'm just trying to use some common sense.
I have confidence in our negotiating committee--I've met two of the guys so far and was impressed. And sure, I'll buy the hat and join you if it comes to it. But I don't expect them to be miracle workers.
gator