Waco,
Let me preface my response by saying that it is not my intention to be inflammatory. That being said, the answer to your question is yes. In the same way that a plantation owner and his slaves may have a “positive relationship”, at-will pilots and their management may have a “positive relationship”.
As a prerequisite for this circumstance, I think it is necessary for a benevolent management team, with a benevolent management philosophy, to be part of the equation. Also it is essential that good economic times be present.
In reality what seems to usually happen is that, even under the best of circumstances, managers either bring in an engrained dislike of pilots from an earlier experience in the industry, or their attitudes evolve within the crucible of reality. Let’s face it, our interests as pilots do not always align with those of management. We want to get the job done as safely as possible. Ideally we want to operate equipment that is free of discrepancies. We want lots of rest in-between duty days.
Management on the other hand, especially during difficult economic times, wants to simply fill the schedule with the pilots and aircraft at hand. They don’t want to hear about broken planes, tired pilots at bad weather conditions. The very first pilots union was started, in 1919, by a group of airmail pilots in NJ in response to pilots being fired because they refused to fly in 0/0 conditions in a Curtis Jenny, which had rudimentary flight instruments. They organized and the pilots were reinstated.
You currently serve at pleasure of your employer. You can be fired for a good reason, bad reason, or no reason at all. What this means is that your management is your parent. Because you can be terminated at the whim of your management you are their child. Just as it is within my power to have my Golden Retriever euthanized tomorrow morning without question, your management may terminate your employment tomorrow morning, throwing you and your family into turmoil.
As I’ve said before, union pilots enjoy Just Cause previsions contained within their contracts. This inherently changes their relationships with their management.