Boeingman said:Remember TORQUE guys?
Enlighten me, please. I know that UAL's pilots have several skeletons in the closet. Does this have to do with the original Frontier?
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Boeingman said:Remember TORQUE guys?
32LT10 said:You vote yes or no. There was no, Is this sustainable? box. The landscape was different in 2000. If you were even in aviation back then you might remember. There were two parties that signed the agreement. UAL and ALPA. Without both it would not have been valid. Dubo and Goodwin were not the biggest mental giants they liked to think they were.
Go AAhead and Bemoaan UAAL escaaping from Baankruptcy. The AA Daay is coming aand it maay not be so bright.
Typicaal AAer. Do you guys haave someon to staart you caars for you. Aafter the screw job you gave the TWAA people I would not be aable to sleep at night. Much less trust the straanger on the street.
Andy said:Do you really want to open this can of worms? OK, my first day at UAL was June 2000, completed training Sep 2000. I was unable to vote for C2K since I was on probation.
Mad Dog Dubinsky was the UAL MC. He was able to get (not the sharpest tool in the shed) Jimmy Goodwin, a 30-something year UAL employee who worked his way up from bag smashing or CS or something along those lines, instead of Bob Nardelli, whom Gerald Greenwald had chosen as his successor. The reason why Mad Dog wanted Jimmy Goodwin in there instead of Nardelli is that he knew Nardelli would be a tough negotiator against labor, whereas 'ol Jimmy would be a creampuff. Mad Dog was able to use his seat on the UAL BOD to nix Nardelli. UAL's loss, Home Depot's gain. (Of course G4G5 would spin this into Nardelli being told to hit the bricks at UAL and he had no where else to go other than the troubled Home Depot).
Mad Dog was able to leverage the dumba$$ decision to buy USAirways at a HEFTY premium at $60/sh into C2K negotiations. That's not to say that the decision to buy USAirways was bad at that time (that's a whole 'nuther can 'o worms; I'd need to save it for a different post). Greenwald had promised the pilots a seamless contract, but Jimmy was easily distracted by shiny objects (the USAirways acquisition), much like a certain poster on this board and told Mad Dog that Greenwald, not he, had promised a seamless contract.
'Ol Jimmy didn't know what hit him during the 'summer of love' and caved in to Mad Dog on just about everything.
Why did Mad Dog go for the 'money contract' (his words) and save the work rules for the next contract? Because Mad Dog hit age 60 a couple of years after C2K, which would set him up for a hefty lump sum & retirement check. And we, the UAL ALPA membership, fell for it.
I guess that the last laugh's on Mad Dog, since he choked the goose hard enough that retirees will no longer be getting golden eggs, him included.
While management is to blame for many fcukups at UAL, there are enough fingers pointing at the pilots for us to not have hands clean in the matter.
I don't think that most UAL pilots realized that C2K was unsustainable, even after summer of 2001. I was in Airbus training in the summer of 2001, and the guy next to me was also in a class at UAL (to this day, I don't know who he was and don't care). He yelled in the phone so loud at his wife that it was easy for me to hear his side of the conversations. In a nutshell, this guy was building a $1.5 million house for his bride, and had bid up to the largest equipment he could (ie bottom reserve pilot) so that they could afford it. She wanted $10K to go to Europe for the summer while he was in training. After a few days of this, the noise in the next room finally subsided; he caved. I wonder who she's sucking blood from nowadays.
As for me, I completed the process of dumping my money grubbing wife in April 2001. It cost me everything we had, but at least I got to keep my pension. :nuts: I was fortunate in that I didn't have any extra cash to blow on toys or anything else. My first year two paycheck was Oct 2001; I banked the entire pay raise.
AAflyer said:You are pretty pathetic,
I remember where some of your pilots wanted to put the USAirways guys when that merger was a possibility. Pretty smug to come off judging the way you do.
.
AAflyer said:The irony out of this, most of the TWA guys I speak with seem to think it was UAL who usually treated them the worst, or wished they would do everyone a favor, and go out of business.
GuppyWN said:Ever heard the one about the UAL gal pestering center for a shortcut? Some unknown voice came over the radio and said "just be patient sweetie, your whole career has been a shortcut."
Stepping off the ridgeline,
Gup
Andy said:Man, I don't recall anyone saying that they wished TWA would go out of business. Then again, the last 3 years have wiped most of my memory banks clean.
The Guard unit that I flew in had about half a dozen TWAers and at least a couple of dozen non-TWAers (AMR, LUV, UAL, NWAC, DAL, lotsa regionals). I jumpseated in & out of STL a lot, so I'd be trying to jump with a lot of TWA pilots. I never saw any of them treated poorly or told that they should go out of biz.
AAflyer said:I have just said what was told to me by TWA captains I have flown with. I am sure the majority never said a thing. When you look around, it seems there is always the 5% at each airline that likes to raze everyone else. I think we may have even seen a couple on this board.
Dizel8 said:CASM excluding fuel:
AMR 7.78
UAL 7.5
A little surprised UAL was not able to get it lower!
Andy said:Enlighten me, please. I know that UAL's pilots have several skeletons in the closet. Does this have to do with the original Frontier?
Dizel8 said:I may be ignorant, but it seems if you add more employees, without increasing flights or adding airplanes, that hiring more would drive CASM up.
After all, less employees per plane is more efficient. Unless of course you mean, that at the same time hiring and recalls of less senior people, while more senior people leave, will drive cost down?