APA officially in negotiations with ALPA
#191
His points are valid and this rant-y type of reply does nothing to help the ALPA cause. Might want to work on the delivery. Or be ok with *****ing for the rest of your career when it doesn’t work the way you hope.
Look, APA certainly has some warts. Absolutely nobody disputes that. But to expect people to just blindly follow a switch to ALPA when they’re already happy with their $/QOL ratio, without so much as a single coherent argument other than “because I said so”, is a really naive perspective.
By the way, I also signed a card.
Look, APA certainly has some warts. Absolutely nobody disputes that. But to expect people to just blindly follow a switch to ALPA when they’re already happy with their $/QOL ratio, without so much as a single coherent argument other than “because I said so”, is a really naive perspective.
By the way, I also signed a card.
#193
well said.
I don’t care what people think needs to be fixed. I want to know how it will be fixed.
Does ALPA just walk into SkyView (pick a building) and scare the **** out of everyone?
Is our company going to all of a sudden change its behavior because of our union?
Are we going to replace all of our APA leadership on day one?
How long do we need to wait until all of the magic at ALPA turns AA into the stuff of DAL/UAL’s dreams?
I don’t care what people think needs to be fixed. I want to know how it will be fixed.
Does ALPA just walk into SkyView (pick a building) and scare the **** out of everyone?
Is our company going to all of a sudden change its behavior because of our union?
Are we going to replace all of our APA leadership on day one?
How long do we need to wait until all of the magic at ALPA turns AA into the stuff of DAL/UAL’s dreams?
A move to ALPA won’t magically make this disinterested and disengaged pilot group suddenly more informed and unified. The same reps will likely run for MEC positions, it’ll just be easier to recall them if they suck.
No, your dues won’t “double”. It’s been stated multiple times that ALPA members don’t pay THAT much more in dues, and whatever new rate would likely be closer to APA’s current rate.
At worst, a move to ALPA seems like a break even. The upside is worth it to me. But I don’t think it’ll happen, because of our cluelessly content and disinterested pilot group.
#195
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Joined: Jan 2020
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The argument for ALPA is that, structurally, it’s far easier to recall bad reps. Supposedly there are more checks and balances on union members bailing for management jobs. Better financial analysis/costing resources and negotiating attorneys/training for Section 6. Better member polling. The risk of a DFW rep using his personal agenda to create BS like “a non-vote counts as a no-vote” is minimized or eliminated. Then there’s the argument that ALPA leads the way with fighting Age 67, single pilot, TSA overreach, etc etc. Supposedly.
A move to ALPA won’t magically make this disinterested and disengaged pilot group suddenly more informed and unified. The same reps will likely run for MEC positions, it’ll just be easier to recall them if they suck.
No, your dues won’t “double”. It’s been stated multiple times that ALPA members don’t pay THAT much more in dues, and whatever new rate would likely be closer to APA’s current rate.
At worst, a move to ALPA seems like a break even. The upside is worth it to me. But I don’t think it’ll happen, because of our cluelessly content and disinterested pilot group.
A move to ALPA won’t magically make this disinterested and disengaged pilot group suddenly more informed and unified. The same reps will likely run for MEC positions, it’ll just be easier to recall them if they suck.
No, your dues won’t “double”. It’s been stated multiple times that ALPA members don’t pay THAT much more in dues, and whatever new rate would likely be closer to APA’s current rate.
At worst, a move to ALPA seems like a break even. The upside is worth it to me. But I don’t think it’ll happen, because of our cluelessly content and disinterested pilot group.
As for Union leadership behavior and supposed checks and balances to prevent things- “supposedly” isn’t facts. Human behavior is human behavior. If a union rep wants to go management, and the company wants them, unless it’s specifically in the C&B, can ALPA actually stop it?
as for dues, you are probably right that over all, at any given years end, the dues rate probably won’t be any different- but pilots are cheap- and the older they get, the cheaper they are- so if it means even one month of dues is higher than 1% outside of section 6, people are going to lose their minds.
With regard to the “Gustin Amendment” - that will still be in effect if there is a merger vote- and as far as I can tell- it’s only applicable to this scenario; none of our other voting counts non-votes as no votes. So yeah, maybe it will prevent something like this in the future- but it won’t get us there today.
Fighting age 67, etc. - there is also the argument that more unions being against it, the better. Yes, ALPA represents a lot of voices, but in DC, it’s one union.
Say the board does approve a merger vote- when do we get to hear from ALPA National on why we should vote them in and HOW they will fix the things that the pro-ALPA camp says is broken? Will there be multiple town halls from/with them where they present their case? Do they want us, if so, why (rhetorical). I won’t speak for others, but without hearing from ALPA National, I won’t vote for them.
Last edited by Tattooedaviator; 10-12-2025 at 08:43 AM.
#196
This is my issue with the pro-ALPA types. They complain that our contract "isn't good enough" but it passed with 73% to 27% and when I ask them personally they said they voted yes. So for a strong majority of pilots they thought it was good enough at the time and now are trying to re-trade because they want more?
The other major issue I have is nobody is explaining how ALPA will be any better at *insert pet peeve here*. It is essentially "APA screwed this up therefore ALPA will make life perfect". How?
My concern is there is all this effort and focus being put into the letterhead and at the end of the day nothing will change except my dues will nearly double.
I am open minded to change but you need to show me how things will be better. I agree with your complaints about APA but how does changing the name fix any of them?
The other major issue I have is nobody is explaining how ALPA will be any better at *insert pet peeve here*. It is essentially "APA screwed this up therefore ALPA will make life perfect". How?
My concern is there is all this effort and focus being put into the letterhead and at the end of the day nothing will change except my dues will nearly double.
I am open minded to change but you need to show me how things will be better. I agree with your complaints about APA but how does changing the name fix any of them?
To the former point. keep in mind that Covid reset all the Legacy contract to be near-simultaneous negotiating. UA and AA both (thankfully) rejected their first sub-par deals, and DL came in with a *massive* improvement, that both UA and AA then copied, in many cases to the letter/penny. (UA ALPA’s table proposal, for example, was less than what DL achieved, which caused them to immediately withdraw their proposal). None of that is to rub anyone’s nose in anything. That’s just what happened - DL’s negotiating team individuals deserve the credit. Not as much the rank and file. Each pilot group still controls its own destiny/MEC, and has almost complete autonomy on their own ops. If a group elects weak Reps, weak results will still follow, regardless of the “letterhead”. I’d like to think a singular union would be a benefit for all of us
#197
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#198
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2021
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What ALPA doesn’t do is change the company’s behavior. We have all seen the company violate the contract. We are still waiting for the company to implement items in the contract- and we are about to start working on a new one. I don’t see AA as being scared of a new Union banner.
#199
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Joined: Jan 2020
Posts: 282
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Disagree. AA absolutely owns APA at the negotiating table and they know it. How many times did we hear "we asked and they said no" when we had perhaps the greatest leverage as pilots in history? ALPA and the National Office is a different animal and I truly believe AA management is hoping we keep APA in place. They don't want us to have the backing of the national office next round of negotiations.
#200
Line Holder
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,546
Likes: 134
Disagree. AA absolutely owns APA at the negotiating table and they know it. How many times did we hear "we asked and they said no" when we had perhaps the greatest leverage as pilots in history? ALPA and the National Office is a different animal and I truly believe AA management is hoping we keep APA in place. They don't want us to have the backing of the national office next round of negotiations.
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