TWA Dude
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 3,666
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Marko Ramius said:Besides the fact I feel that is hypocritical, my question is this: does RJDC believe ACA ALPA should be party to those scope negotiations? After all everybody's ALPA and they believe it's ALPA's responsibility to ensure that member carriers are party to negotiations that affect their pay and working conditions.
You guys should not get my opinion confused with anything coming from the RJDC. The two are certainly not one in the same. I just read the same public information that the others on this board have access to.does RJDC believe ACA ALPA should be party to those scope negotiations? After all everybody's ALPA and they believe it's ALPA's responsibility to ensure that member carriers are party to negotiations that affect their pay and working conditions.
Draginass said:...or at least until management can find somebody else willing to work for even less.
~~~^~~~ said:My personal opinion is that ALPA's primary failing is that they allowed domestic codeshare agreements in the first place. ALPA should be pushing for integration for each "brand" of flying to reduce the alter ego problem and unite pilots. That is idealistic, but ALPA can go that direction by addressing the issue of the wholly owneds which is not that great of a legal problem, just a political problem.
RichardFitzwell said:
As for ALPA forgiving the CAL pilots that crossed in the early 80's, they sort of did...but the pilots didn't.
R.F.
Mallard said:Yeah it's self-preservation. We regional guys are supposed to be understanding of that, right?
But I fail to see how major airline pilots were so understanding of RJs entering the market. It gets a little tiring to hear off-color comments when I jumpseat because I fly an RJ. We're taking their business, blah, blah, blah. Yes sir, thanks for the ride!
When those same people are furloughed, that lil' RJ doesn't look so bad. And somehow those strong beliefs can be bent to keep themselves seated in a jet.
If we can keep more pilots flying both at majors and regionals all the better. But you must understand why there is some bitterness about all this.
We need the same senority list now (SSL).
Draginass said:
I've asked this many times from regional guys, but still don't have a coherent, practical, and specific answer -- How specifically is that going to happen when the major corporations have completely separate companies with completely separate labor contracts? What possible leverage do the major and regional company unions have to make the corporation merge the commuter and major lines?? Spare me the kum ba ya, please. Just the hard, specific actions required.
Originally posted by Draginass Well reasoned logic, but insufficient practicality. The devil is in the details.
What is AMR's incentive to merge AE and AA when they enjoy 12 more years of status quo on AE ALPA's contract? AE ALPA has NO leverage whatsoever and AMR won't even counter-offer APA's proposal to consolidate. If AMR's even SLIGHTLY interested, it doesn't show.
Until it is cheaper to operate together (and STAYS cheaper), it's not going to happen. How can the unions make it cheaper, without impacting compensation? I can't see how AE guys can work for any less compensation than they do now. The company knows that the mainline union will push very hard to raise the small jet compensation very steeply and very fast, and would have much more leverage than an AE union. No incentive here for AMR.
Do you really expect the mainline unions to say, "sure," we'll acquiese our scope on ASM and jets, AND we'll cheapen our contract enough to make it worthwhile for the company consolidate? I guess then, mainline wouldn't have to worry about the company attacking their scope . . . because the union would have already given it away!
Also, assuming that we want the seniority list to be linear, that means that ALL new hires will be forced to enter at the bottom at VERY low pay scales regardless of their previous experience. Since you were talking about having defacto C scales within the contract, would you be receptive to allowing highly experienced new hire aviators to jump bypass the entry-level 1000hr/300multi CFIs? If not, I doubt many military aviators would even consider a company where they would have to work for very low compensation for maybe a VERY long time. That company would not compete for the best people. UNLESS, compensation for the small jets in-line with that of the mainline. (retirement, schedule, work rules, etc). But according to your thesis, the small jet guys would be on a sub-scale sanctioned by the mainline contract. Are you really implying that AE RJ pay and benefits are proportional to that of mainline and not a defacto sub-scale???
Pardon me for being frank, but it seems that the real agenda and main benefit that a single list presents to regional guys is an automatic entry into mainline.
If the AMR though this was good for them, they'd be asking for it instead of scoffing at it. What that tells me is somebody's going to have to give something up to extract it from AMR as a trade-off concession. Who's that gonna be, AE ALPA or APA?
You haven't convinced me of the economic incentive for the company to consolidate nor of the cost/benefit trade-off that mainline pilots would have.
I wanna believe, but you've got to give me a reason, and so far, you haven't even come close.