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Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2001
- Posts
- 6,137
Early information is that this will be a win for the ASA and the SkyWest pilots. For the SkyWest team, this agreement includes incentives for Delta to grow the new operation and a 15 year agreement to continue as a partner.
I do not believe SkyWest's announced intention to operate ASA as a wholly owned subsidiary with separate management will fly. ALPA was aggressive (and won) in challenging Mesa over CC Air and Freedom. Despite the corporate structure, ALPA should view this as a merger. There may be an NMB election to determine the bargaining agent, which ALPA might not win (but probably will).
ASA has merger and fragmentation language and the SWPA probably has some sort of an agreement with their management as well.
Despite the dismal morale of the ASA pilots, I think most of us are very hopeful that our new SkyWest owners will be an improvement. Current ASA Management is publishing that there will be no changes, but I think change is inevitable as Skywest should get rid of unnecessary redundancies in our operations. I particularly doubt Skywest will see the need for a SLC ASA base with CRJ700 operations. Also there are other parts of ASA that I believe SkyWest will not tolerate. But, there are some things ASA does a very good job on and parts of ASA's operation would benefit SkyWest. SkyWest has announced a "best practices" initiative which accomplishes this goal.
In total, it is good news. Delta treated us like outsiders and morale suffered as a result. I expect SkyWest to do better with their purchase and I particularly like the stability a 30 year President like Jerry Atkin brings to the mix.
I do not believe SkyWest's announced intention to operate ASA as a wholly owned subsidiary with separate management will fly. ALPA was aggressive (and won) in challenging Mesa over CC Air and Freedom. Despite the corporate structure, ALPA should view this as a merger. There may be an NMB election to determine the bargaining agent, which ALPA might not win (but probably will).
ASA has merger and fragmentation language and the SWPA probably has some sort of an agreement with their management as well.
Despite the dismal morale of the ASA pilots, I think most of us are very hopeful that our new SkyWest owners will be an improvement. Current ASA Management is publishing that there will be no changes, but I think change is inevitable as Skywest should get rid of unnecessary redundancies in our operations. I particularly doubt Skywest will see the need for a SLC ASA base with CRJ700 operations. Also there are other parts of ASA that I believe SkyWest will not tolerate. But, there are some things ASA does a very good job on and parts of ASA's operation would benefit SkyWest. SkyWest has announced a "best practices" initiative which accomplishes this goal.
In total, it is good news. Delta treated us like outsiders and morale suffered as a result. I expect SkyWest to do better with their purchase and I particularly like the stability a 30 year President like Jerry Atkin brings to the mix.
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