General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
- Posts
- 20,442
When people propose a SLI that is based on a straight relative seniority they are effectively proposing that all airline pilot jobs flying similar equipment are the same. Therefore the first pilot hired at Virgin America flying the A-320 series can say he has the same quality job as the #1 A-320 pilot at Delta. Because they fly the same equipment this must be true. Using this logic any other factors relating to the quality of employment are not considered. It doesn’t matter that the Delta pilot makes considerably more money that the VA pilot, or that the work rules are much more favorable, retirement is better, or even the much more stable nature of the job at Delta. In non-industry terms, a county court judge and a Supreme Court justice are really the same because they are both judges.
In addition to the stated relative seniority fairness benchmark, under this logic a Captain seat is sacred and must be preserved. It makes no difference if a CA at Airline A makes less that an FO at airline B. Using this logic, the ultimate goal of any pilot is not to make the most money for the least work days, but is to have a fourth stripe on his shirt. Therefore any pilot entering the profession should go to the airline that will get his that stripe as early as possible. Work conditions and pay are irrelevant. A CA at a regional has a better job than an FO at a major, by nature of the fact that he is a CA. A UPS 747 CA has the same job as a Kalitta 747 CA. Using this logic, pay is not a consideration only seat position. In non-industry terms, the CEO of “Bill and Ted’s excellent hot dog stand” is really the same and should be paid the same as the CEO of General Electric because they are both CEOs.
Is this really what the relative seniority people think is “fair and equitable”? I am not and will not propose a particular SLI. Posters have repeatedly stated that relative seniority is the only “fair” way to do an SLI, and I am questioning the logic behind this. Fire away, but please use your mind and don’t try to pick on the specific examples I used. They are intended to be generic in order to tease out the logic behind the assertion.
OK3, RESPECTFULLY, let me put this in perspective for you. TWO like sized companies that have similar histories, fleets, and future plans can be merged in perfectly one for one with relative seniority. Now, SWA and AT are not really exactly alike, the same size, or have similar history. BUT, that doesn't mean relative can't be done. Looking at the last couple arbitrated outcomes, if one carrier has a specific operation that is different than the other, then the list can be modified. USAIr East had widebodies flying to Europe from PHL and CLT, and AWA did not. So, Nicelau gave the top 500 spots to USAir East pilots, and then went relative from there to the bottom of the list. Delta and Northwest were about the same, history and game plan wise (both INTL and DOM carriers). But, Delta had more planes and NWA was going to dump some older ones--so the arbitrators did relative seniority, but the numbers were not one for one, more like 2 Delta pilots and then 1 NWA pilot--because of the difference in pilot numbers. Overall, DL and NWA pilots stayed within about 2% of where they were relative to their own original list.
Relative seniority is fair because it keeps you CLOSE to what you were doing before a merger. I still think SWA has been around a bit longer, and they will get the top couple or few hundred spots, but then after that, since both are LCCs, with narrowbodies, and similar plans while both bringing things to the table (slots, INTL ops, etc), it will be very close to relative plus or minus a couple % points. This will all be done AFTER you get a joint contract (same pay) to avoid a USAir/AWA disaster. If SWA merged with VA, the eventual list would favor SWA a lot more because SWA is older and VA is a lot smaller with less to offer, and not profitable . AT, OTOH, is a larger company, offers more, and is profitable (compared to VA).
I can understand (somewhat) your fear and anger. You are nervous about losing time for upgrade and that eventual huge payout. You might worry about losing your base, or being bumped somewhere you don't want to go. Some of those AT guys are very young in the left seat, and that means again a longer wait for you. But, that is what happens when you merge. Future upgrade time is NOT added into the mix by the arbitrators. In the DL/NWA merger, the NWA pilots stood to upgrade a lot faster than the DL pilots because most of the senior NWA pilots stayed at NWA during the BK because they kept their pensions. That did not happen at DL, where many Captains left before BK. That upgrade potential was not awarded to the NWA guys overall. That is just the way the arbitrators saw it. And, a staple just won't happen, and your leader now has a vested interest in making this happen, along with Wall St. Just remember one thing: PEACE AND LOVE BABY, PEACE AND LOVE.
Regardless, you guys are all FANTASTIC PEOPLE. REALLY, I can't believe I AM BEST FRIENDS WITH YOU GUYS! DAMN, I FEEL GREAT ABOUT THAT. And, if you have time this evening, try to PLEASE do something nice for someone or something. Try to feed a giraffe at the zoo a butterfingers candy bar. No, that sound it is making after you fed it is NOT a choking sound, rather it is laughing that you gave him such a treat. Remember, we all like candy! See ya!
Bye Bye--General Lee
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