Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Let's Get Real Now!
Whisky
I do not fly for Mesa - I left Mesa for several reasons including pay and QOL.
As you said, you are already benefiting from the industry leading contract - good for you!
Now put yourself in the shoes of a Mesa pilot, knowing and experiencing what they have in the past up to present day, including all of the whipsawing, the closure of CC Air, the creation of Freedumb (which had taken flying away from Mesa), the set up of a strike fund and strike centers, the influence of the mainline partners and the current condition of the industry and economy. While some of the Mesa pilots voted the TA down (which would have been my vote), I know that those who voted for it did not vote yes on a whim. I know that serious thought went into most of their decisions and weighing of the consequences. And yes, we all have a responsibility to all pilots, we also have individual responsibilities and responsibilities we are held accountable to fellow pilots at our company.
Especially as a regional pilot, understanding the life, you have to realize that this was not an easy decision for these pilots to make. If everyone is going to cry unity and brotherhood, how about supporting these pilots and understanding that the way they saw it, voting NO meant closure of Mesa and expansion of Freedumb. You can't tell me that 1400 more pilots on the street is better than what we have now, with Freedumb stopped, all MAG pilots flying and more jobs for furloughed mainline pilots (whom all regional pilots at some level have undercut by nature of the fact they work for a regional who has taken mainline flying).
Also, realize that this is all business. I don't believe for a minute that anything done by the Mesa pilots has been malicious in intent nor should they be treated as such. Do you honestly believe that the MEC thought, "Hey, let's take a sub-par contract and we can steal flying away from Air Wisconsin and SkyWest and ACA." I do not doubt, however that management had this in mind, as that is the nature of the business that they run. And remember - it's business, it's big dollars, and we are just the pawns in the process.
The more we all fight with each other, deny jumpseats, point fingers and have are efforts focused there, the more we all play into the hands of management and the more vulnerable we all are.
Let's all take this unfortunate situation and turn it into something to learn from so that as others go into negotiations similar mistakes, misinformation, negative effects, etc. are not repeated.