Quality of Life
#91
Banned
Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 4,378
Likes: 0
From: 7th green
Remember our awesome (and unfortunately temporary) SCP who was told to do something impossible in a meeting? When he told them that what they were asking could not be done he was told to "shut up" by BM? Classy senior leadership. They prefer to live in their own world, reality need not apply.
He protested but was told to make the call anyway. He got about two minutes of "Ho, ho, ho" from Boeing. Guess the managers have never heard of Vmcg.
#92
Right. Firstly, I have never voted YES on a contract here. Secondly, I'm a very Jr Captain and was an FO during the 2009 contract vote...again, I voted No. When the top quarter of the list is gone, I'm happy to inform you I'll still be here for quite a while. The FO's are "screwed" (at least in your mind) because of Alaska Management and their out weighed influence in Arbitration. The Slope is what it is because Management wants it that way and, as per usual in arbitration, they got what they wanted. Also, I commute. I've never picked up a premium trip or VSA'd in my life. It's too much of a hassle even when appropriate to do so.
Perhaps you'd be better served if you set aside your Millennial angst and sense of entitlement and focused on the reality of the situation. Your reactions certainly sounds as if it's fueled by your own self interests...which in your mind I guess you're entitled to do but no one else? What exactly do you propose this pilot group do to achieve our collective goals in 2020? Before you answer, I suggest you read up on the Railway Labor Act before you fly into the predictable, knee jerk, chest pounding tirade of regurgitated, unobtainable wishes that guys like you always espouse in these situations. The RLA is very real and you need to wrap your mind around what it actually means.
You were probably in the 4th grade in 1998, but look up what happened at American Airlines and the APA during their sick out. Is that your idea of a successful outcome? You are an employee. You get a W2. You have a union, and a contract. You and I will never run this airline. Frankly, I don't want to. I want the airline to be profitable because I've experienced what life looks like when your employer is bleeding money uncontrollably. Think unemployment check. When the union asks us to step up and help engage the company in 2020, I'll be there. I always am. That's when it matters. Until then, I set the brake, go home, rejoin my real life and forget all about the Eskimo. You can scream at the ocean all you want. I can't hear you anyway.
Perhaps you'd be better served if you set aside your Millennial angst and sense of entitlement and focused on the reality of the situation. Your reactions certainly sounds as if it's fueled by your own self interests...which in your mind I guess you're entitled to do but no one else? What exactly do you propose this pilot group do to achieve our collective goals in 2020? Before you answer, I suggest you read up on the Railway Labor Act before you fly into the predictable, knee jerk, chest pounding tirade of regurgitated, unobtainable wishes that guys like you always espouse in these situations. The RLA is very real and you need to wrap your mind around what it actually means.
You were probably in the 4th grade in 1998, but look up what happened at American Airlines and the APA during their sick out. Is that your idea of a successful outcome? You are an employee. You get a W2. You have a union, and a contract. You and I will never run this airline. Frankly, I don't want to. I want the airline to be profitable because I've experienced what life looks like when your employer is bleeding money uncontrollably. Think unemployment check. When the union asks us to step up and help engage the company in 2020, I'll be there. I always am. That's when it matters. Until then, I set the brake, go home, rejoin my real life and forget all about the Eskimo. You can scream at the ocean all you want. I can't hear you anyway.
Since it seems to be the position that the ultimate form of legal relief is off the table, and the only contractual changes are out of the charity of managements heart, (because ultimately negotiations is just whistlin past the graveyard).
How do you explain the gains made by Delta, United, American, JetBlue etc on scope, work rules and pay?
I asked before but nobody has answered. If the only threat in negotiations is an arbitrator not ruling in their favor, (which is no threat at all) what else is left? Image? The “happy family” facade? BM has already said he’s willing to sacrifice that.... so what’s left if anything?
#93
Banned
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 1,241
Likes: 0
Well I hope Q2 surprises. AAL market cap has shrunk to 16B, AS is 7.5. UAL can’t get out of its own way. On the AS side I have heard of 70 Captains overstaffed. If things don’t change 40 A320 down grades and 30 Boeing are coming this fall. That should change the rhetoric around here. You all sound like a bunch of cry babies. Step up do your job, do a good job, build a great company and maybe in 2020 you will be able to negotiate improvements. Drag your feet, cry like children and see what we get.
#94
Banned
Joined: Apr 2017
Posts: 627
Likes: 0
Well I hope Q2 surprises. AAL market cap has shrunk to 16B, AS is 7.5. UAL can’t get out of its own way. On the AS side I have heard of 70 Captains overstaffed. If things don’t change 40 A320 down grades and 30 Boeing are coming this fall. That should change the rhetoric around here. You all sound like a bunch of cry babies. Step up do your job, do a good job, build a great company and maybe in 2020 you will be able to negotiate improvements. Drag your feet, cry like children and see what we get.
#95
Well I hope Q2 surprises. AAL market cap has shrunk to 16B, AS is 7.5. UAL can’t get out of its own way. On the AS side I have heard of 70 Captains overstaffed. If things don’t change 40 A320 down grades and 30 Boeing are coming this fall. That should change the rhetoric around here. You all sound like a bunch of cry babies. Step up do your job, do a good job, build a great company and maybe in 2020 you will be able to negotiate improvements. Drag your feet, cry like children and see what we get.
#96
Right. Firstly, I have never voted YES on a contract here. Secondly, I'm a very Jr Captain and was an FO during the 2009 contract vote...again, I voted No. When the top quarter of the list is gone, I'm happy to inform you I'll still be here for quite a while. The FO's are "screwed" (at least in your mind) because of Alaska Management and their out weighed influence in Arbitration. The Slope is what it is because Management wants it that way and, as per usual in arbitration, they got what they wanted. Also, I commute. I've never picked up a premium trip or VSA'd in my life. It's too much of a hassle even when appropriate to do so.
Perhaps you'd be better served if you set aside your Millennial angst and sense of entitlement and focused on the reality of the situation. Your reactions certainly sounds as if it's fueled by your own self interests...which in your mind I guess you're entitled to do but no one else? What exactly do you propose this pilot group do to achieve our collective goals in 2020? Before you answer, I suggest you read up on the Railway Labor Act before you fly into the predictable, knee jerk, chest pounding tirade of regurgitated, unobtainable wishes that guys like you always espouse in these situations. The RLA is very real and you need to wrap your mind around what it actually means.
You were probably in the 4th grade in 1998, but look up what happened at American Airlines and the APA during their sick out. Is that your idea of a successful outcome? You are an employee. You get a W2. You have a union, and a contract. You and I will never run this airline. Frankly, I don't want to. I want the airline to be profitable because I've experienced what life looks like when your employer is bleeding money uncontrollably. Think unemployment check. When the union asks us to step up and help engage the company in 2020, I'll be there. I always am. That's when it matters. Until then, I set the brake, go home, rejoin my real life and forget all about the Eskimo. You can scream at the ocean all you want. I can't hear you anyway.
Perhaps you'd be better served if you set aside your Millennial angst and sense of entitlement and focused on the reality of the situation. Your reactions certainly sounds as if it's fueled by your own self interests...which in your mind I guess you're entitled to do but no one else? What exactly do you propose this pilot group do to achieve our collective goals in 2020? Before you answer, I suggest you read up on the Railway Labor Act before you fly into the predictable, knee jerk, chest pounding tirade of regurgitated, unobtainable wishes that guys like you always espouse in these situations. The RLA is very real and you need to wrap your mind around what it actually means.
You were probably in the 4th grade in 1998, but look up what happened at American Airlines and the APA during their sick out. Is that your idea of a successful outcome? You are an employee. You get a W2. You have a union, and a contract. You and I will never run this airline. Frankly, I don't want to. I want the airline to be profitable because I've experienced what life looks like when your employer is bleeding money uncontrollably. Think unemployment check. When the union asks us to step up and help engage the company in 2020, I'll be there. I always am. That's when it matters. Until then, I set the brake, go home, rejoin my real life and forget all about the Eskimo. You can scream at the ocean all you want. I can't hear you anyway.
#97
Line Holder
Joined: Apr 2016
Posts: 68
Likes: 0
There will never be a strike as previously mention by others. We are Alaska. The State of Alaska will not function without us. Way to much money involved in Oil and general services to the bush communities. OTZ, BET, BRW, OME, not to mention all of Southeast will run out of milk and eggs in a few days without us. One or two phone calls from these tribal leaders to the governor and you can forget about a strike.
Wrong. The state will be just fine. You forgot about NAC (who runs jets), RAVN/Hageland, little ACE, Big ACE (who runs jets), & Lynden who will step their game up when we strike. SE want's their eggs that bad, they can deliver them. Stop with this "we're the only game in town crap." No one who knows better is buying it.
And our ALPA better emphasize that fact when mgmt. tries this "we're the only game in town in the state of AK" argument.
#98
Well I hope Q2 surprises. AAL market cap has shrunk to 16B, AS is 7.5. UAL can’t get out of its own way. On the AS side I have heard of 70 Captains overstaffed. If things don’t change 40 A320 down grades and 30 Boeing are coming this fall. That should change the rhetoric around here. You all sound like a bunch of cry babies. Step up do your job, do a good job, build a great company and maybe in 2020 you will be able to negotiate improvements. Drag your feet, cry like children and see what we get.
So let’s assume we don’t get bought. And, we don’t grow fast enough through M&A or organic growth....
What’s to stop Delta, from cutting rates long enough to run us out of our own market the same way Middle Eastern Airlines (Emirates, Etihad) are doing to Delta? They’ve already started putting pressure on our throat by pressuring code share partners to cut ties.
What’s our hedge? We’re pushing back deliveries. Nobody seems to think holding on to our niche long term works.
#99
Line Holder
Joined: Apr 2018
Posts: 700
Likes: 0
Since it seems to be the position that the ultimate form of legal relief is off the table, and the only contractual changes are out of the charity of managements heart, (because ultimately negotiations is just whistlin past the graveyard).
How do you explain the gains made by Delta, United, American, JetBlue etc on scope, work rules and pay?
I asked before but nobody has answered. If the only threat in negotiations is an arbitrator not ruling in their favor, (which is no threat at all) what else is left?
How do you explain the gains made by Delta, United, American, JetBlue etc on scope, work rules and pay?
I asked before but nobody has answered. If the only threat in negotiations is an arbitrator not ruling in their favor, (which is no threat at all) what else is left?
#100
Banned
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 1,241
Likes: 0
Even though you clearly enjoy posting as a condescending a$$, I have a serious question for ya....
So let’s assume we don’t get bought. And, we don’t grow fast enough through M&A or organic growth....
What’s to stop Delta, from cutting rates long enough to run us out of our own market the same way Middle Eastern Airlines (Emirates, Etihad) are doing to Delta? They’ve already started putting pressure on our throat by pressuring code share partners to cut ties.
What’s our hedge? We’re pushing back deliveries. Nobody seems to think holding on to our niche long term works.
So let’s assume we don’t get bought. And, we don’t grow fast enough through M&A or organic growth....
What’s to stop Delta, from cutting rates long enough to run us out of our own market the same way Middle Eastern Airlines (Emirates, Etihad) are doing to Delta? They’ve already started putting pressure on our throat by pressuring code share partners to cut ties.
What’s our hedge? We’re pushing back deliveries. Nobody seems to think holding on to our niche long term works.
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