Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

This is how ugly an SLI can be. Watch out SWA

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
I can assure you any SLI decisions will not be made here on Flightinfo.com.
These SWA people are very smart. I am certain they are weighing in on the reactions of both the SWA employees as well as the AT employees. I find it more likely than not that this acquisition will go through mainly because I believe that the large majority of Airtran employees love this opportunity and will do what is best for this transaction to go smoothly.

This forum is not for negotiations but for an open, honest discussion of viewpoints that I would not be surprised is being monitored by both companies. Along with many other sources on the web.

I think it would to safe to think that if the leaders of SWA thought their core culture would be greatly affected by this transaction they would carefully consider the implications and make responsible decisions based on these discoveries.
 
Some Dope in a an RJ posts that and you believe him? Are you that gulibble.
I hope not.

M

Easy big guy. No I'm not that gullible, but I did stay at a holiday inn express last night.:laugh:
Besides, it was said by several posters. But then again, this is FI.
 
I hear often that the DAL/NWA was a smooth SLI, as it was more or less quite. However, talking to my buds there, they were not happy and still are not. Actually getting a little worse. Pay protections going away in a few months? Getting displaced from ATL to NY, bumped off ER to the MD, ....
 
I hear often that the DAL/NWA was a smooth SLI, as it was more or less quite. However, talking to my buds there, they were not happy and still are not. Actually getting a little worse. Pay protections going away in a few months? Getting displaced from ATL to NY, bumped off ER to the MD, ....

That's normal with any merger/acquisition. Fences will eventually come down and there will be some seat and or domicile displacements. There will always be some that are unhappy or feel screwed. That deal did go smoothly when considering most other SLI deals. There is no perfect SLI situation. Never has been and probably never will be.
 
I hear often that the DAL/NWA was a smooth SLI, as it was more or less quite. However, talking to my buds there, they were not happy and still are not. Actually getting a little worse. Pay protections going away in a few months? Getting displaced from ATL to NY, bumped off ER to the MD, ....

This makes no sense to me in the general meaning and purpose of a SLI "fence".

Generally, a "fence" prohibits people from one former employee list from bidding or displacing to specific equipment or specific domicile of another former employee list and vice versa. After the "fence" expires then open bidding to a "vacancy" is allowed.

What you are implying is that after the DAL/NW "fence" expires... there will be a general system bid and all the equipment and bases go out for an overall bid and people can get displaced?

Again, I would think that after the "fence" comes down, Pilots could only bid a vacancy and NOT displace someone.... UNLESS there was a reduction notice. Maybe the DAL/NW vacancy awards are differnet.
 
This is the way it will go down, No R.S
Straight forward, Training, Aircraft, Pleasure, Leisure time, Excitement.

Enjoy your time on the bottom!
 
There is a snapshot taken at the time of the announcement so that contracts are not changed to dilute issues like pay differences.

A snapshot is taken of the seniority lists, not of the contracts.

And I can assume that if Swapa does not like where the negotiations are going, they can stretch this out for years and years to their benefit. They must agree on arbitration.

No, they don't have to agree on arbitration. Arbitration is required by law if the parties can't come to an agreement on SLI within a relatively short timeline. Neither party can hold it up if they don't like the other party's bargaining positions.

Precedent...Schmecedent...

Who's to say that precedent is sacrosanct and can't change...and thus the direction of legal opinions, once the results play themselves out? Can not arbitrators re-formulate their opinions when they witness a AAA/AWA SLI disaster?? I think that precedent is only good up until that last case, and that legal opinion can change with the times...IMHO.

Anybody here have some legal background on "precedent"???

Arbitrators are under no legal obligation to adhere to past precedent. However, they generally do so, because it makes it easier on all arbitrators to render decisions. If a case has already been decided a certain way, the arbitrator can cite that case in his decision on a new similar case, claim that precedent has already been set, and then he doesn't have to be the bad guy who came in with his own decision out of the blue. It's basically a system of arbitrators covering each other's backs. It's a relatively small community, and they pretty much all operate in a similar manner.
 
I hear often that the DAL/NWA was a smooth SLI, as it was more or less quite. However, talking to my buds there, they were not happy and still are not. Actually getting a little worse. Pay protections going away in a few months? Getting displaced from ATL to NY, bumped off ER to the MD, ....


Given the nature of pilot personalities, this is one of the smoothest mergers and SLIs ever. It will never be perfectly smooth and without angst, because that is just the nature of pilots and this industry.

All those other things (displacements, etc) might have happened without any merger. The bottom line is that in our case "the whole is greater than the sum of the parts" is a very true statement. DAL brought a lot of things that NWA didn't have to the merger, and NWA brought a lot of great things that DAL didn't have (and wouldn't ever have, specifically Asia). The combination of both airlines' assets has been a very profitable one. I hope it continues for many years to come.
 
In a roundabout way, arbitrators do take earnings into account. NWA/Republic had a ruling that allowed NWA pilots to upgrade ahead of Republic pilots on wide bodies. USAirways pilots got the wide body slots. The wage implications were not lost on the arbitrators in either case. Since there is no difference in equipment in this case, SWAPA has to make the case for the pay disparity. If the arbitrator buys off on the snapshot being not just of seniority but also pay, then the recent contract will not be of help to the AT. It might be a new precedent, or just an admission that arbitrators have always considered earnings in some form. I wouldn't rule it out in this case, but it is not a slam dunk either. It depends on who makes the more compelling argument. Rumor has it that some senior AT pilots have been saying they should get relative percentage seniority. Good luck with that one!:laugh:
 

Latest resources

Back
Top