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FAA isn't going to do Squat they are all typical Govt employees all talk no action. They may run around and look busy for a couple of months ( Job Justification) send out a bunch of emails maybe even have a focus group or two. But in the end it will be business as usual. This company has been turned in a million times to the Feds and it all goes nowhere. Don't look to them to solve any problems not gonna happen
Incidentally, there are FO slots on the Legacy. They were not put out for bid for Flexjet FOs. They sent an email to the Options pilots offering them transfers, AND word is Phil was given an out of seniority award along with another transfer. But "come on guys, we're still Flexjet, Flex on." uke:
I'd be upset however a part of me is thanking the good lord I won't have to deal with him.
Let him be over there with all the other IGMs.
However, how utterly foolish is he to *yet again* bargain away his soul to the lowest bidder? First Officer in a program that has basically made its hallmark out of seniority Captain slots? Mind blowing.
He's not just a prostitute, he's a truck stop hooker.
Not looking to be an *********************************** but now there's evidence their business practices are the main culprit in actual accidents, incidents and other triggers like fatigue that threaten public safety. That is a factual statement, not hyperbole.
Job justification might be status quo but when there's a paper trail that implicates the bureaucrats, the government is surprisingly good bringing down the gauntlet. You have to remember the public has a large appetite for the "dangers" of aviation and has a tendency to place the profession of "pilot" in a higher and more mystical esteem than reality affords.
Now the company is the one who has to thread that needle not just with the FAA but their customer base. The scary ******************** is starting to pile up and right now management is scrambling to keep reported concerns to a minimum. That's all I need to know to know they are feeling the heat.
Regarding your other beaurocraric concerns of arbitration, the same logic follows. No owner in his right mind wants a pilot flying him on what is now the norm schedule for OneSky pilots. And when an arbitrator finds out the company can already give their pilots better schedules, workrules and paychecks on current revenues, expect a little common sense to come out of his ruling. Just like the FAA, he also does not want to be responsible for advocating business practices that threaten public safety. Expecting an arbitrator to buy into the rhetoric the company can't afford to treat us well when Uncle is out blowing money on super sonics is a doubtful gamble.
Today is the 11th. Supposedly one of the busy days, right? Based on my own schedule and flightaware, it actually appears to be a pretty light day by the current ass grinding standards of the busy season here at Flexjet. If JW really did deny people PTO, that was probably not a very smart idea.
Doesn't he realize the farce is relatively proveable? Does he really think a judge will just take his word for it? Does he think he can pull a little Nathan Jessup flight log trickery?
Funny. I believe in that movie, the court day turned out a lot different than expected too.
High hopes. High hopes.