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

US Airways & American

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
The 10% rule does not apply to AAA, about 50% completly off the reservation, 25% angry but sheep following the heard and 25% have a basic or better understanding of contracts and the law and the probable outcome of this mess the East has created and we live in.
 
Nobody walked away from anything. THe arbitration was a seniority proposal from the previous CBA WHICH IS NOW HISTORY! REally, catch a clue and get updated on things. There is no legal precedence to use an arbitrated list from a former CBA that was expelled from the property. Bottom line, DOH is coming because it is in the USAPA bylaws and AMR pilots either arbitrate or take DOH. They will take DOH any day rather than put a bunch of kids from a regional airline ahead of them on a seniority list, sanctioned by a senile arbitrator. Been there done that. not again!

Whew! And I was concerned that the USAPA koolaide had made it impossible for you to see the truth. :nuts:

Nicky, you will be served the Nicolau sans a spoonful of sugar. You're going to swallow that bitter little pill, whether you like it or not. Rage on my friend. I'll see you in Philly or CLT soon.
 
Nobody walked away from anything. THe arbitration was a seniority proposal from the previous CBA WHICH IS NOW HISTORY! REally, catch a clue and get updated on things. There is no legal precedence to use an arbitrated list from a former CBA that was expelled from the property. Bottom line, DOH is coming because it is in the USAPA bylaws and AMR pilots either arbitrate or take DOH. They will take DOH any day rather than put a bunch of kids from a regional airline ahead of them on a seniority list, sanctioned by a senile arbitrator. Been there done that. not again!

You truly are delusional to believe this.
 
So my buddy at AA was asking me the other day "John, if we merge, do you know how I might find a way to lose 1200 numbers to a bunch of guys younger than me, so that it will permanently destroy my earning potential? I'm looking to really screw my third wife in this upcoming divorce!"

I said, "sure, push for the Nic! You'll have tons of guys who were in flight school when you were hired at AA, who went on to Mesa and Trans States and Colgan, and they'll take all those pesky, high-tax-bracket widebody jobs. You won't have to worry about it."

He's relaxed now, lubed up and ready to give his career to y'all at the mighty, all-powerful America West Airlines where PHX rules and LAS should have ruled and Europe was just around the corner. But then, he's a "special" case.
 
wow. this only gets better. entertainment at its finest.

oh by the way this is from wikipedia:

US Airways Attorney Robert A. Siegel made the following statement to the court on 2/21/12 Court Document 164:
Given that the integrated seniority list was accepted by US Airways as required by the Transition Agreement, which is binding on US Airways’ pilots (whether represented by ALPA or USAPA)

The Transition Agreement established a process for integration of the seniority lists – namely, “final and binding” arbitration between the East Pilots and West Pilots “in accordance with ALPA Merger Policy.” (Sep. Stmt. [Doc. No. 156-1] at ¶¶ 10-11.) But it also created an obligation on the part of US Airways to accept the integrated seniority list generated through that agreed-upon process so long as the specified conditions were met, and it thereby created prospective substantive rights that inured to the benefit of the pilots and not just process rights. (Doc. No. 156-1 at ¶ 10.) Once ALPA (as the pilots’ representative) presented the integrated seniority list to US Airways and US Airways accepted it, if not sooner, those substantive rights materialized and were not, as USAPA would have it, a mere “tentative agreement between ALPA and US Airways on a bargaining proposal.” (Doc. No. 152 at 16:27-17:1.) Thus, even if USAPA’s proffered distinction between “substantive rights” and “process elements” had support in the RLA jurisprudence, which it does not, the Transition Agreement undeniably created “substantive rights” with respect to seniority integration and USAPA inherited that status quo when it replaced ALPA as the pilots’ representative.


now lets get the lunchroom and layover laywers present their sides of the argument.
 
So my buddy at AA was asking me the other day "John, if we merge, do you know how I might find a way to lose 1200 numbers to a bunch of guys younger than me, so that it will permanently destroy my earning potential? I'm looking to really screw my third wife in this upcoming divorce!"

I said, "sure, push for the Nic! You'll have tons of guys who were in flight school when you were hired at AA, who went on to Mesa and Trans States and Colgan, and they'll take all those pesky, high-tax-bracket widebody jobs. You won't have to worry about it."

He's relaxed now, lubed up and ready to give his career to y'all at the mighty, all-powerful America West Airlines where PHX rules and LAS should have ruled and Europe was just around the corner. But then, he's a "special" case.

Except your buddy at AA didn't just go through two bankruptcies back-to-back and on the verge of liquidation. Quite a different story! By not accepting the Nic, you are still serving under your current twice-bankrupt-screwed contract.

AWA came around 1984, and US Air (in its form) had been around for decades and decades. A straight DOH proposal would have hosed the AWA group, and no arbitrator would have gone for that. Look at all the recent mergers, it's been a status/category method of at least some type.

Btw, even under Nic, weren't your top 500 US Air pilots still protected by being the top 500? Hardly a screw job!
 
So my buddy at AA was asking me the other day "John, if we merge, do you know how I might find a way to lose 1200 numbers to a bunch of guys younger than me, so that it will permanently destroy my earning potential? I'm looking to really screw my third wife in this upcoming divorce!"

I said, "sure, push for the Nic! You'll have tons of guys who were in flight school when you were hired at AA, who went on to Mesa and Trans States and Colgan, and they'll take all those pesky, high-tax-bracket widebody jobs. You won't have to worry about it."

He's relaxed now, lubed up and ready to give his career to y'all at the mighty, all-powerful America West Airlines where PHX rules and LAS should have ruled and Europe was just around the corner. But then, he's a "special" case.

Well Said!!!
 
Except your buddy at AA didn't just go through two bankruptcies back-to-back and on the verge of liquidation. Quite a different story! By not accepting the Nic, you are still serving under your current twice-bankrupt-screwed contract.

AWA came around 1984, and US Air (in its form) had been around for decades and decades. A straight DOH proposal would have hosed the AWA group, and no arbitrator would have gone for that. Look at all the recent mergers, it's been a status/category method of at least some type.

Btw, even under Nic, weren't your top 500 US Air pilots still protected by being the top 500? Hardly a screw job!

Apples and Oranges, my friend. What you want to ignore and what you forget is the fairness of integrating by time served. You want to leapfrog your fellow pilots under the excuse of "well, you were going bankrupt so your just lucky to have a job". I say BS!!! AMR will want nothing with your bid to get another lottery ticket! I have friends there and they are well aware of the nic fiasco and you westies and how you operate
 
abolish seniority.
progression based on merit only.

Pipe dream. The ideal airline pilot flies his whole career without having to prove his ability. Do the airlines want their pax to conclude that the guys flying the MD80s are just not as good as those flying the 747s?
 

Latest resources

Back
Top