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well that was quick.....

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While they are furloughed, nobody else took .05 of a pay cut to help them out.

Actually, many hundreds of our pilots took a much larger percentage of a pay cut, saving millions of dollars for the company. They participated in those measures to save those jobs, and it took more than your ".05" off the payroll.

Guess what? Management furloughed them anyway.

Nice try. Concessions do not save jobs. How many times must this be proven?
 
B19,

We had voluntary measures and nobody will know for sure if it delayed the furlough or not. Most of us took a reduced schedule for a time for a reduction in pay. It was the union's idea and it was coordinated by the union.
 
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B19,

We had voluntary measures and nobody will know for sure if it delayed the furlough or not. Most of us took a reduced schedule for a time for a reduction in pay. It was the union's idea and it was coordinated by the union.
This has been explained ad nauseam to him but he still sticks to the party line. Some forever have their heads in the sand.

Concessions never saved a job.
 
i was actually thinking about the 495 at nj, but i'll admit.. It's a pretty good example.

all the nj pilots that weren't furloughed will hop and down and say how great the 495 were treated by the union, but the bottom line is they were still furloughed and put out on the street.

while they are furloughed, nobody else took .05 of a pay cut to help them out. I don't want to hear about donations, etc. I want to know what they did to open the contract in an attempt to save any of the jobs at all. (even a single one!) typical union crap, the only sacrifice they made are those that were low on the seniority list.
Concessions do NOT save jobs... Why would we cheapen our cba for no reason???
 
Guys don't be too hard on him. B probably doesn't even believe his own bullcrap but when the check comes in, he still has to do his job. Instead of feeling sorry for him, feel sorry for those dumb enough to pay him. :D
 
Concessions do NOT save jobs... Why would we cheapen our cba for no reason???

Concessions not only save jobs, they save companies fischman. That's why when an airline goes into bankruptcy because the union won't negotiate in good faith on their own, why jobs are saved.

AMR is about to find that out... yet again. Last time they went to the brink of bankruptcy before saving thousands of pilot and administrative jobs (along with probably the company) by taking concessions.

This time they will be court imposed. Either way, it's opening up the contract so the company spends less than it takes in. Like it or not, those are concessions. And they always save jobs.

Problem is, you still find it perfectly OK to sacrifice those below you on the seniority list to maintain your greed in the name of "brotherhood."

Yea, right...
 
Concessions not only save jobs, they save companies fischman. That's why when an airline goes into bankruptcy because the union won't negotiate in good faith on their own, why jobs are saved.

AMR is about to find that out... yet again. Last time they went to the brink of bankruptcy before saving thousands of pilot and administrative jobs (along with probably the company) by taking concessions.

This time they will be court imposed. Either way, it's opening up the contract so the company spends less than it takes in. Like it or not, those are concessions. And they always save jobs.

Problem is, you still find it perfectly OK to sacrifice those below you on the seniority list to maintain your greed in the name of "brotherhood."

Yea, right...
Well guess what? We aren't on the verge of bankruptcy. We are not an airline. We know that any concession given will only line the pockets of our illustrious CEO with gold. We aren't that stupid.

Every airline that threatened furloughs if they didn't get concessions would furlough ANYWAY after they GOT the concession. If the company can't afford the CBA, they shouldn't sign it!

Seniority rules at a union shop. That means that the junior guys go first in a furlough. And yes, I would rather be on furlough than cheapen our CBA with a concession. If that displeases you, then I'm thrilled.


It looks like your firm is getting their checks from NetJets now? How are things at Avantair?
 
Concessions not only save jobs, they save companies fischman. That's why when an airline goes into bankruptcy because the union won't negotiate in good faith on their own, why jobs are saved.


AMR is about to find that out... yet again. Last time they went to the brink of bankruptcy before saving thousands of pilot and administrative jobs (along with probably the company) by taking concessions.

This time they will be court imposed. Either way, it's opening up the contract so the company spends less than it takes in. Like it or not, those are concessions. And they always save jobs.

Problem is, you still find it perfectly OK to sacrifice those below you on the seniority list to maintain your greed in the name of "brotherhood."

Yea, right...


Yea Right.....Concessions and then management bonuses. Ok DA-19, lets hear it.

American drops exec bonus
Outcry from unions that took pay cuts prompts end of retention bonuses; exec pensions stay in place.
April 18, 2003: 6:03 PM EDT

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - American Airlines announced Friday that its top executives have agreed to give up retention bonuses after an outcry from leaders of unions whose members had agreed to deep pay cuts earlier this week.




[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Published on Tuesday, April 22, 2003 by the Washington Post [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]CEOs You Don't Want in the Cockpit [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]by Harold Meyerson[/FONT]​

[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]It's a good thing that Donald J. Carty, the chairman and chief executive of American Airlines, doesn't also pilot one of its planes. If he did, and if the plane went into an uncontrolled dive and he handled it the same way he's running the company, he'd bail out as the plane fell to earth, drift dreamily down on a golden parachute, land lightly amid the carnage and give himself a nice cash bonus for coming through unscathed. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Over the past week it has become clear that Carty has engaged in the same kind of double-dealing, to conceal the same kind of double standards, that last year made his fellow Texan and CEO Ken Lay a household name. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]While Carty was convincing American's pilots, mechanics, flight attendants and baggage handlers that they had to accept major pay cuts (ranging from 15.6 percent to 23 percent, and kicking in on May 1) if the airline was to avoid bankruptcy, he was secretly crafting a "retention bonus" for American's top seven executives that would reward them for staying at their posts until 2005. The bonuses, all but one set at twice these executives' annual salaries (Carty's would total $1.6 million), weren't keyed to performance -- a prudent proviso, because American lost $5.3 billion in 2001-02 and things aren't exactly looking up yet. Instead, they seem to derive from the maxim of business guru Woody Allen, who once noted that 90 percent of life is just showing up. Carty's corollary is that if you run the company, just being there can be grounds for doubling your pay so long as nobody's on to you. Nor was this all. Even as top American executives were telling the pilots that the company would eliminate their pension plans if it had to file for bankruptcy, Carty and his crew had secretly created a special pension trust for the company's top 45 executives that no creditor could even touch during a bankruptcy proceeding. More wondrous still, Carty and three other top honchos were to be paid extra for administering this trust. [/FONT]

[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]It gets worse. [/FONT]

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0422-04.htm
 
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Concessions not only save jobs, they save companies...
Repeating the same falsehood over and over doesn't make it any more true. It sounds like it should be true, but throughout the history of aviation, it just doesn't happen that way.

Here's how it normally works:

  • Company says things are tight, and they need concessions to avoid furloughs.
  • Pilots grant concessions.
  • Company furloughs anyway because the business demand doesn't require those pilots.
  • Remaining pilots now cost less, and management rewards itself with a fat bonus, earned by a flat-out lie to the employees.


We've seen these antics before. That's why we're not falling for it.
 

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