Originally Posted by
AntiPeter
I’m aware the new CBA creates more income opportunities than NJA pilots than ever have. With those opportunities is an incentive to stay away from home as long as possible and to fly as many hours as possible.
Is this a better CBA? The safety and fatigue concerns NJA pilots had before 2018 were minimized for new sources of income that don’t keep up with inflation. The lack of regulation in the industry and hundreds of pilots in their 60s and 70s with documented cognitive decline now have an incentive to keep going even longer than before.
NJASAP can’t negotiate successfully in Section 6, nor do they have the ability to get NJA to be transparent with their finances. It’s not easy being the only unionized group in their industry.
While NJA pilots are being paid more than ever, in my view the cost of that improvement is too great and too risky.
With that said, there are many things that make NJA a good place to work and in some ways it surpasses what 121 pilots have.
A lot of the very good and experienced SICs have left the last few years. I wonder if the pilot group is setting itself up for a fatal failure, I certainly hope not but the short sighted ego driven greed was enough to get me off the property.
Well said. NJA has lots of potential to be a career job, a good career job. NJASAP is an almost powerless union, sorry to say. Management holds all the cards right now, and the pilot group voting in this latest small pay increase in exchange for flying tired proved all of that. It was a real missed opportunity to negotiate section 6 and this extension might only carry NJA into the next recession where you lose all bargaining power for real gains.
Where are good, qualified pilots going to come from in the best 5 to 10 years?