Sy-bill
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2004
- Posts
- 210
A staple to the entire AT seniority list would be much worse than a straight relative seniority integration. If this went to arbitration that would backfire for SWA pilots and put the SWA pilots in a bad light due to their lack of good will.
Going to arbitration will likely put up tall fences with respective bases even with bases shared by both airlines. There can be language that will protect AT pilots as long as they are at their base when the SLI is complete. Once you leave that base you are integrated into the entire SWA seniority with your likely DOH seniority. If you are forced to leave your seat and/or base (displacement) the same rules apply. This is just an example of how this will likely work with arbitration.
AT guys feel they have the edge with arbitration and I say not. The AT pilots need to negotiate for what is and not what they are afraid of. If the SWA union does not think you are being remotely reasonable, (relative seniority is not remotely reasonable. Neither is a staple for that matter) you might find the SWA pilots negotiating an interesting rate on the 717. Which I can assume they have no interest in anyways.
This is not a merger. This is an acquisition. The definition itself changes this playing field unlike any other seniority integration since M/B.
The AT pilots have found themselves in an enviable position. Great company, great pay, great benefits, great schedules with most importantly, a bright future. It would be a shame to mess it up for everyone because of a few year downgrade and a few percentage points in relative seniority.
Going to arbitration will likely put up tall fences with respective bases even with bases shared by both airlines. There can be language that will protect AT pilots as long as they are at their base when the SLI is complete. Once you leave that base you are integrated into the entire SWA seniority with your likely DOH seniority. If you are forced to leave your seat and/or base (displacement) the same rules apply. This is just an example of how this will likely work with arbitration.
AT guys feel they have the edge with arbitration and I say not. The AT pilots need to negotiate for what is and not what they are afraid of. If the SWA union does not think you are being remotely reasonable, (relative seniority is not remotely reasonable. Neither is a staple for that matter) you might find the SWA pilots negotiating an interesting rate on the 717. Which I can assume they have no interest in anyways.
This is not a merger. This is an acquisition. The definition itself changes this playing field unlike any other seniority integration since M/B.
The AT pilots have found themselves in an enviable position. Great company, great pay, great benefits, great schedules with most importantly, a bright future. It would be a shame to mess it up for everyone because of a few year downgrade and a few percentage points in relative seniority.
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