Am I the only one that think this "Ty Webb" is not going to be happy working for Southwest?
Oh, he will be, he will be! (in your very best Yoda accent)
There seems to be a sense from the SWA pilot group that something is getting taken away from them... I'm trying to figure out what your precieved loss is.
Excellent question. I'll start: Seniority, tradition, loss of relationship with management.
Seniority. Any "relativee placement" will harm our juniority here at SWA. A larger airline grows slower than a younger one. While a relative placement might be fair, a SWA which grows organically would allow it's pilots to grow and progress quicker (seniority) than aquiring another (relative seniroirty). You might say AT pilots should fear this most as they are coming from a perceived (although extinct) position that growth was in their future. This no longer exists. Do we blame AT pilots? Of course not, but we don't want to suffer this "loss".
Tradition. 30 plus years of pilots have started at the bottom, worked up the rungs, and allowed SWA to be what it is, a success. Nobody has "jumped the rope" and started anywhere but "last" on the list. Nobody. That does a few things to the culture; first, everybody was a "follower" before they led. They learned from the bottom up, that breeds "ownership". The second part of our tradition; you don't want to be the one on the bottom when it fails, so you give it your all. That is our tradition which ends with anything other than staple.
Please explain how the ATL base will be anything other than SWA East forever. I don't mean that as a slam, just a fact that those staying in ATL will never "know" the system of SWA.
Managment relationship. Previously stellar and now defunct? A year ago we had CEO who said he would not commit to buying F9 without an approved employee integration plan. That deal fell through for money reasons, but it was a deal which showed our management would take employee relations to heart during these types of deals.
Flash forward to today, same CEO now states "it is inappropriate for him to comment or interfere with any employee integration issues".
I paraphrased, but you get the idea, so what changed?
I and many others state WTFO? Why was an employee consideration so important last year and now those same considerations are "off limits" and not his problem? More interesting the CEO states "we need to show the servants heart and Golden Rule to those AT employee's as we bring them onboard".
I'm fine with that, but why again should we take a hit in seniority, upgrade, tradition, management relationship? Well, this was or is another loss, not caused by any AT folks, but one we don't want to accept just the same.
There is a middle ground out there, It just might not be right in the middle depending on who you are.