FlyinBrian
Office Slut
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2001
- Posts
- 355
follow-up
To follow up to my previous post in which I did metion that I am for the unions in the pilot industry...
While I am a firm believer in the free market...
Before the unions, airlines engaged in many unsafe practices and often fired pilots who refused to comply with unsafe procedures, or who blew the whistle on such things. I believe it is in the best interest of safety that pilots present a unified front in keeping wages that draw the best, brightest, and safest pilots into the profession. I also believe that it is in the best interest of safety that unions protect pilots who refuse to fly dangerous equipment in less than safe or legal conditions. All told, unions have had a positive effect on the safety of all airline passengers.
Unfortunately, as many posters have pointed out, their monopoly gives the unions a tremendous amount of power, and that power can lead to greed. The unions often ask the airline to accept un-profitability in order to pay their wage. If the union is not willing to allow its members to fly a particular route at a wage the company can turn a profit at, the airline naturally looks to another source of labor to do the flying. Rather than work out an agreement where their pilots would fly the profitable equipment at a reduced wage, the union tries to "scope out" the flying so that nobody can do it. This gives their own airline a competitive disadvantage, and hurts the long-term success and profitablility of their own airline. At the same time, it allows the company to pit different groups of pilots against each other, and ultimately capitalize off of the whipsaw effect. If the mainline pilots would realize that sometimes to make a profit, and airline has to put a smaller piece of equipment on a route, and accept the slightly smaller salary that accompanies that equipment, we could truly unified pilots, job security for more experienced pilots, and no whipsaw for the company to use against us. American's pilots have realized this, and to nobody's surprise, the company laughed in their face.
av8instyle, you are right when you say it's not about YOU, it's about UNITY. But the unions don't offer that right now. We have pilots arguing with pilots, and management is using this stryfe to its own advantage.
In most cases, what is good for the company is good for the long-term opportunities for its employess. We should try to preserve the profitablility of our companies while ensuring safe work rules, and wages that draw the safest pilots to the profession. (That is not to say that more is better. If more means the company lays off or closes its doors, more is definitely worse. Not all unions understand this.)
To follow up to my previous post in which I did metion that I am for the unions in the pilot industry...
While I am a firm believer in the free market...
Before the unions, airlines engaged in many unsafe practices and often fired pilots who refused to comply with unsafe procedures, or who blew the whistle on such things. I believe it is in the best interest of safety that pilots present a unified front in keeping wages that draw the best, brightest, and safest pilots into the profession. I also believe that it is in the best interest of safety that unions protect pilots who refuse to fly dangerous equipment in less than safe or legal conditions. All told, unions have had a positive effect on the safety of all airline passengers.
Unfortunately, as many posters have pointed out, their monopoly gives the unions a tremendous amount of power, and that power can lead to greed. The unions often ask the airline to accept un-profitability in order to pay their wage. If the union is not willing to allow its members to fly a particular route at a wage the company can turn a profit at, the airline naturally looks to another source of labor to do the flying. Rather than work out an agreement where their pilots would fly the profitable equipment at a reduced wage, the union tries to "scope out" the flying so that nobody can do it. This gives their own airline a competitive disadvantage, and hurts the long-term success and profitablility of their own airline. At the same time, it allows the company to pit different groups of pilots against each other, and ultimately capitalize off of the whipsaw effect. If the mainline pilots would realize that sometimes to make a profit, and airline has to put a smaller piece of equipment on a route, and accept the slightly smaller salary that accompanies that equipment, we could truly unified pilots, job security for more experienced pilots, and no whipsaw for the company to use against us. American's pilots have realized this, and to nobody's surprise, the company laughed in their face.
av8instyle, you are right when you say it's not about YOU, it's about UNITY. But the unions don't offer that right now. We have pilots arguing with pilots, and management is using this stryfe to its own advantage.
In most cases, what is good for the company is good for the long-term opportunities for its employess. We should try to preserve the profitablility of our companies while ensuring safe work rules, and wages that draw the safest pilots to the profession. (That is not to say that more is better. If more means the company lays off or closes its doors, more is definitely worse. Not all unions understand this.)