Originally Posted by
Groundhog
OK. I'll bite.
If you were betting on that statement, you would certainly lose.
The pilots at UA lost control of the 50/70 pax jets during the bankruptcy. That gun is no longer pointed at our head. The pilot group is not in total agreement about all of the issues, and our unity is not where it should be at this stage of the game. However, the one thing that an overwhelming majority of UA pilots do agree on is scope and the 90 pax small jet flying. (I'll leave room for the 777 and 400 captains who are unaware of the issues.)
The NC has been given direction from the MEC. 90 seat jets will not be in any agreement unless they are mainline aircraft.
If you want to play the never-say-never game, I would agree that every pilot has their price. In this case, the "enticement" would be a significant price that the company would never be willing to pay, particularly since we all know that allowing UAX to fly anything larger than 70 pax means a significant reduction if not the complete loss of our airbus fleet. The only scenario that I see that would include UAX flying 90 pax is a second bankruptcy. All bets are off then.
This looks more like flame-bait, than your usual level-headed industry observations.
Hog
Groundhog,
70% of Rickair’s posts on Mesa are hatred driven assumptions with no solid facts. I wouldn’t read to deeply into it.
Your post on UAL MEC allowing 90 seat flying at the regional level is right on.