CAL EWR B737
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- Joined
- Sep 10, 2005
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- 652
SuperFLUF said:With CAL '98 hires in the left seat and 50% on the seniority list and UAL's '99 hires just now recalled................there's no F'n way a DOH integration would be a forgone conclusion. It would be way more complex and antagonistic than that.
Where do you get your numbers from? Based on the union seniority list on CALALPA's web site including tomorrow's newhire class I am 41% on the list and I was hired 4/87. The most senior 98 hire is 70% on the seniority list. Look I understand all about beating your chest, etc., but at least be somewhat accurate with your numbers.
You want to talk about mergers and ALPA merger policy lets talk. I was in the EWR crew room for three months during the 2001 ALPA campaign explaining it to our pilots so I used to understand it very well.
Here's what I will tell you, internal growth is far better than any merger scenario period. Fact is we as pilots unfortunately have little or no control of our companies destiny. All we can do is react and try to protect our careers. It doesn't help taking shoots at the other pilot group. More than likely if CAL mergers it will be with an ALPA carrier.
I was very involved in the ALPA/IACP merger. While I am very unhappy with our local CAL ALPA leadership and very disappointed with Duane Woerths leadership since 9/11, I refuse to get involved with any ALPA decertification campaign. I would never be a part of getting ALPA off the property for these two valuable resources ALPA provides, merger policy and aero medical.
ALPA merger policy will not give you a great deal. It will however will give you a somewhat fair deal, if you can fairly integrate any seniority lists. ALPA merger policy sets forth a fair process nothing more nothing less. Doesn't mean DOH, or any group is going to be happy. Just a fair process. In the end a neutral arbitrator will most likely merge the list with no chance of appeal. He/she is supposed to look at things like, preserve pre merger career expectations, no unfair windfalls for either side, etc., and a whole long list of other criteria. When it's all said and done most likely everyone will feel like they got the shaft and will all would have done much better if both companies remained separate and continued with internal growth. It is however far better than having no binding merger process as we at CAL had on Superbowl Sunday 98. I am quite convinced if we at the IACP (our independent Union at the time) didn't do what we did some of us would have been stapled to the bottom of the Delta list and many would have been without a job at all. That is what ALPA Merger Policy protects against a completely unfair intergration like a staple job if both cariers are somewhat similiar.
Also before anyone talks about past mergers one thing is very important with any merger process including ALPA Merger Policy, what do you bring to the table? If one group comes from a company that is far stronger than the other, pilot wages, working conditions, benefits and over all career expectations. Than more than likely the weaker group will not fare well. However if both groups have similar pre merger career expectations, pay benefits and working conditions than there is a good chance for success with both pilot groups. Additionally I'm talking about ALPA's Merger Policy not Fragmentation Policy. In a Fragmentation (sale of assets) the pilots from the fragmentation don't fare well.
Instead of beating each other on this forum lets just be civil hope we don't merge and if we do than let the process work.
Below is what happened to us at CAL on Superbowl Sunday 98.
We used to act like real union pilots at CAL. On Super Bowl Sunday 98 I set up the tail on our former Executive Vice President of Human Resources and our former EVP of Operations to a secret location in NYC. If our union couldn't find out where the Continental Airlines Board of Directors were meeting (secret location) our union would have not been able to protect our careers by delivering our threat.
David Bonderman (lead investor and stock holder in CAL) wanted to sell his ownership and two offers were on the table, a full blown Delta merger or the NWA codeshare deal with limited ownership but two separate companies. Our management told us earlier at a breakfast meeting that the Delta deal was by far the leading deal doing into the CAL Board of Directors meeting.
At the time our weak contract included completely substandard pay rates (Our captains made what a third year Delta FO made) and literally no Scope or merger protection should have the Delta deal gone through, we were toast!
Our union Board of Directors had a conference call and told our President do what every you have to do to save our jobs including illegal actions.
Its was in our best interest to have the NWA deal go through since there was no merger and we could finish Contract 97 (brought us into the ball park of most majors on pay and contained some Scope language). Long story short Gordo tipped us off of what was going down. He would have been out of a job a long with many of his buddies if the Delta deal went through. So for that day Gordo and our union were married. Our little independent union illegally threatened to burn the house down and Delta could have what was left if the Delta deal went through without a comprehensive side letter creating scope for the CAL Pilots. Gordo used this threat (Severe Labor Unrest) to persuade Bonderman to go with the NWA deal. In the end that's what occurred Gordo made millions for keeping his job for several more years.
He later claimed victory to all CAL employees that Management saved their jobs nothing about what the pilots did. He also stole from the IACP the name of his book "From worst to first," That was a brochure the IACP made up titled "From worst to first the story about how the 4000 pilots saved Continetal. If you read the Wall Street Journal that came out the following Tuesday it describes this in far more detail. The quote I remember was Leo Mullin(former Delta CEO) in a corporate airplane in Houston early the next morning saying "you mean this deal fell through because of labor?" Apparently Delta had managers in all our hubs ready to talk to our employees about the merger on Monday morning.
Any way I left a lot of details out for brevity but here is one example of how a union does have some limited power to prevent a merger. I can tell you this our union leadership would have given away their first born to have had ALPA Merger Policy on Super Bowl Sunday 98. More than likely from here on out we will find out about any potential mergers when we read about them in the paper. However we at CAL have great news. OUR WEAK AND SPINELESS MEC OFFICERS ANNOUNCED THEIR RESIGNATIONS ON FRIDAY. That coupled with this weeks hopefully successful recall of our IAH CA AND FO rep will allow a strong leadership running the CAL MEC. That is must should a merger be announced.
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