Originally Posted by
acl65pilot
Its about the end game. Fight the battles but never miss sight of the goal. I also submit that if more pilots that were disenfranchised with the current path got engaged, one of a few things would happen. 1) The leadership would get the message and adjust, or 2) The support would be there to make the changes many desire. Until the participation levels go way up, it does not matter if it is ALPA, DPA, IPA, APA, USAPA, SWAPA, etc the results will be the same.
ACL- We all want restoration of our contract. The loan and sacrafice that we and our families have given this company in their time of need has to be reconciled with. Particularly now that executive compensation at DAL is highest of all major airlines. A pay raise on top of that would be nice. As a minimum, we have the
nothing less than SWA crowd arguing with the DALPA acolytes, as they try to manage expectations down, over trip pay and w2's.
C12K is a an emotional and angst ridden topic. We have a contract comparison that is skewed towards airlines and data that doesn't reflect all of our competitors. It is missing data on KLM/AF, and that information will not materialize, if it does, until after the survey closes.
Basically, there is already an organized effort to manage expectations down.
Why one might ask?
Perhaps some math and basic human behavior can answer the ? and might be a key to better aligning our goals and needs.
DALPA reps make 92 hours a mo. on the highest equipment they can hold in any base. Add to that a $1,000.00/mo. stipend.
Assuming there are reps that are on the 75/76A that can hold 777A on paper, here is the difference.
767a @ 182hr @ 70 hrs (for oct) grosses $12,740
777a @ 217hr @ 92 hrs (always) grosses $20,872 with the stipend. Disclaimer: these are basic gross figures and don't include any other income i.e. green slips.
I think there are some among us that are already getting restoration pay. And, why would they risk upsetting the apple cart. Might they be motivated for a status quo agreement that is comfortable for the company and Wall Street?
Now, back to ACL's point. What if the disenfranchised pilots that are frustrated with the current tone and management of expectations became engaged and changed the compensation for DALPA
volunteers to what they currently hold at the average line value for that category. Throw in the stipend and per diem and thats it.
I imagine that very quickly we all would be fighting for restoration.
I am short on the details of whether this would be a resolution change, policy manual change, or involve recalls, but if the pilots want it and support it, it could be organized and happen. A showing of grass roots unity to achieve true unity. We
all need to be pulling the same oars in the same boat.