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Old 11-17-2013 | 03:23 PM
  #143010  
Carl Spackler's Avatar
Carl Spackler
Back on TDY
 
Joined: Apr 2008
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From: 747-400 Captain
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Originally Posted by JobHopper
OK, I will.

Yes, the B scale went away and we did get a pay raise. Everyone remembers that. What nobody seems to remember is that those were part of the Pre-Strike contract.

The big sticking point in that 1998 contract was NEWCO. The company wanted to "be able to create" a subsidiary to outsource flying (sound familiar?) and we didn't want to let them. The strike ultimately ended after a few weeks on a Wednesday with the NEWCO provision approved. The following Monday morning NWA announced the creation of Compass.

As a B-scale, still-on-probation DC-9 FO, I followed all of this with great interest. I technically wasn't even guaranteed a job after it was over, though the union did promise to bring everyone back. The only material difference between the pre- and post-strike contracts was a small pay raise above the pre-strike figure. I don't remember the exact number for me (it was around $1), but I do remember calculating it would take 3 years for that raise to recoup the salary I lost during the strike.

There is a lot of ego and testosterone tied to that strike even today. "We showed them who was boss!" Unfortunately, I have to disagree. All of the material gains in that contract were there pre-strike. And there were quite a few of those; the Negotiating Committee did a far better job than we recently saw here.

The strike made sense to me going into it; it left me scratching my head after it was over. We got a 3-years-to-recovery pay raise and the company got outsourcing when all was said and done. The strike itself accomplished very little, in my humble opinion.
It's always puzzling to read stuff like this. You start out by saying the strike got rid of the B scale and secured pay raises, then you go on to dismiss it. The B scale didn't affect 95% of the pilots...only pilots like you. Yet we all voted to strike, then struck. We didn't return to work until management agreed to end the B scale.

While you're busy scratching your head over what was accomplished, you could have been on a permanent B scale without it.

Carl