Reserve for Dummies
#2841
Line Holder
Joined: Feb 2024
Posts: 393
Likes: 76
Additionally, the reference to 23.S.5 cited throughout Scheduling Alert 24-03 and several council newsletters I have since located pertains to Long Call pilots. My question here, however, is about whether CNO (with a voicemail) satisfies the "attempted contact" language of 23.S.9, which pertains to pilots who are contactable while on short call. It says:
A short call pilot:
d. must be able to promptly report for an awarded/assigned rotation.
e. will not be assigned a rotation without an attempted contact by Crew Scheduling.
The question is whether CNO (with a voicemail) qualifies as "attempted contact."
A short call pilot:
d. must be able to promptly report for an awarded/assigned rotation.
e. will not be assigned a rotation without an attempted contact by Crew Scheduling.
The question is whether CNO (with a voicemail) qualifies as "attempted contact."
”If the pilot is in a contactable status (i.e., Long Call or Short Call), a voicemail from a crew scheduler for a flying assignment or rest period is considered attempted contact.”
It specifically excludes a VM from CNO is attempted contact in that case.
#2842
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 12,547
Likes: 1,155
You can possibly know if you don't check.
Thats why a real live human scheduler is required to call and either speak with you directly or leave a message indicating a duty assignment or prospective rest(non-fly day 12 hour exempted etc.). You can also look at daily trip coverage and open time history in iCrew to ascertain a trip assignment along with the timestamp of when the assignment was made.
Thats why a real live human scheduler is required to call and either speak with you directly or leave a message indicating a duty assignment or prospective rest(non-fly day 12 hour exempted etc.). You can also look at daily trip coverage and open time history in iCrew to ascertain a trip assignment along with the timestamp of when the assignment was made.
#2843
Point of order (1): you are not required to acknowledge anything except assignment of a rest period during the one required post-rotation schedule check.
Point of order (2): I know you know, but others in here aren’t thinking of how a PR affects the start of a LC block.
Point of order (2): I know you know, but others in here aren’t thinking of how a PR affects the start of a LC block.
Point of order (2): I used 18:01 in an attempt to clarify, but perhaps I worded it confusingly by including the minutes. (18:00 was meant as 18 hours and 00 mintues, not the time 1800). But you are absolutely correct that a PR will change the time of day that 18 hours calculates to. Which is why it's best to speak of it in terms of hours, not time.
//break, break//
To the other discussion about the last no-fly day and "making yourself aware" of an assignment, I'd say the words matter. If you want to consider it a "distinction without a difference" in your mind, I'm okay with that. But we are not required to check our schedule for this. You must 'make yourself aware', because CS will not call you. You can have a friend check for you (not that you would, but you could). As opposed the "requried" pre-release schedule check which has a 30 minute window.
Also, agree with others that CNO is only legal for conversion of a reserve pilot
Last edited by FangsF15; 01-14-2025 at 06:19 AM. Reason: Corrected per tennisguru's clarification below
#2844
Roll’n Thunder
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 5,174
Likes: 584
From: Pilot
Scheduling is not required to call when:
1. You are assigned a rotation or SC that reports between 10 and 18 hours after the start of LC if the assignment was placed by 12 hours prior to the start of LC
2. If a rotation or SC reporting at least 18 hours from release is on your schedule when you do your required schedule check within 30 minutes of block in on your final flight of a rotation
3. If a rest period that starts immediately is on your schedule when you do your required schedule check within 30 minutes of block in on your final flight of a rotation
4. If you are on LC, when you enter PWA-mandated rest at 0600 on the last day of reserve going into a golden day off or vacation
5. If you are on SC, when you enter PWA-mandated rest at 1200 on the last day of reserve going into a golden day off or vacation
6. If you are on LC, when you enter your PWA-mandated rest up to 24 hours prior to the report of a rotation assignment
7. If you are on LC, when you enter your PWA-mandated rest 18 hours prior to the start of a SC period
Scheduling is not required to call, but can use CNO voicemail when:
8. You are actively on LC or SC at the time of CNO call, and the CNO notifies you of a future SC period
An actual scheduler MUST call you to notify you of the following (and the call MUST come while you are on a contactable status of LC or SC):
9. Any LC rotation assignment not covered under point #1 or 2.
10. EVERY SC rotation assignment (PWA 23.S.9.e). If you are assigned SC under points #1 or 2, and at that time you see SC AND a rotation during your SC window, scheduling is still required to call you once you start SC to notify you.
11. Any rest not associated with points #3-7 above. This includes when they release you into rest at 1800 going into a non-golden X day.
If you are off duty or in rest of any form (X day, vacation day, assigned rest, pre-rotation/pre-SC rest), or on a day of training (CQ, RCY, etc.) you can ignore any and all calls/CNO/voicemails from scheduling. Wait for proper notification/assignment from any of the applicable points above.
Never answer the phone when scheduling calls. Listen to the VM to see what they are trying to do, and if needed you can call them back to talk to them.
Never acknowledge any micrew/icrew notification unless you have first been properly notified.
1. You are assigned a rotation or SC that reports between 10 and 18 hours after the start of LC if the assignment was placed by 12 hours prior to the start of LC
2. If a rotation or SC reporting at least 18 hours from release is on your schedule when you do your required schedule check within 30 minutes of block in on your final flight of a rotation
3. If a rest period that starts immediately is on your schedule when you do your required schedule check within 30 minutes of block in on your final flight of a rotation
4. If you are on LC, when you enter PWA-mandated rest at 0600 on the last day of reserve going into a golden day off or vacation
5. If you are on SC, when you enter PWA-mandated rest at 1200 on the last day of reserve going into a golden day off or vacation
6. If you are on LC, when you enter your PWA-mandated rest up to 24 hours prior to the report of a rotation assignment
7. If you are on LC, when you enter your PWA-mandated rest 18 hours prior to the start of a SC period
Scheduling is not required to call, but can use CNO voicemail when:
8. You are actively on LC or SC at the time of CNO call, and the CNO notifies you of a future SC period
An actual scheduler MUST call you to notify you of the following (and the call MUST come while you are on a contactable status of LC or SC):
9. Any LC rotation assignment not covered under point #1 or 2.
10. EVERY SC rotation assignment (PWA 23.S.9.e). If you are assigned SC under points #1 or 2, and at that time you see SC AND a rotation during your SC window, scheduling is still required to call you once you start SC to notify you.
11. Any rest not associated with points #3-7 above. This includes when they release you into rest at 1800 going into a non-golden X day.
If you are off duty or in rest of any form (X day, vacation day, assigned rest, pre-rotation/pre-SC rest), or on a day of training (CQ, RCY, etc.) you can ignore any and all calls/CNO/voicemails from scheduling. Wait for proper notification/assignment from any of the applicable points above.
Never answer the phone when scheduling calls. Listen to the VM to see what they are trying to do, and if needed you can call them back to talk to them.
Never acknowledge any micrew/icrew notification unless you have first been properly notified.
Last edited by tennisguru; 01-14-2025 at 05:53 AM.
#2846
Agree with all else, great summary. Most especially the last 3 bolded points. If you are not-contactable, you can safely ignore any calls, live scheduler or not.
#2847
Roll’n Thunder
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 5,174
Likes: 584
From: Pilot
While there was some initial confusion, on multiple FB posts the scheduling committee has confirmed that CNO voicemail on SC to notify of a future SC period is legal. Any contactable status allows for CNO voicemail assignment to a future SC period.
#2848
The 'gift' that keep on giving... I bet we will get leaned on hard for CNO for more/all notifications in C26. They are pushing this SC thing for a reason (or multiple reasons). I hope we don't give one more inch, but if it does happen, for goodness sakes we better get a huge quid for it. It would be huge relief for the company. AA apparently already gave it up...
#2849
Copy, bummer. I guess I missed that correction on FB. Thanks for the clarification.
The 'gift' that keep on giving... I bet we will get leaned on hard for CNO for more/all notifications in C26. They are pushing this SC thing for a reason (or multiple reasons). I hope we don't give one more inch, but if it does happen, for goodness sakes we better get a huge quid for it. It would be huge relief for the company. AA apparently already gave it up...
The 'gift' that keep on giving... I bet we will get leaned on hard for CNO for more/all notifications in C26. They are pushing this SC thing for a reason (or multiple reasons). I hope we don't give one more inch, but if it does happen, for goodness sakes we better get a huge quid for it. It would be huge relief for the company. AA apparently already gave it up...
Is it though? Pages upon pages of nonsense about when, who, and how someone should be notified about schedules seems asinine. Our contract already needs specialists to break down various sections why does it need to be more difficult than it needs to be.
#2850
Roll’n Thunder
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 5,174
Likes: 584
From: Pilot
And then when you've been forced to fly and illegal RR/reserve assignment/23k assignment, the pay "specialists" deny, deny, deny. So then you have to send it to ALPA who has so much work dealing with all that crap that it'll take 3 months before a volunteer can even get to it. So you might get paid correctly 4-5 months after scheduling gave you the shaft.
This is why we are all pushing for pilots to know those "pages upon pages of nonsense." That "nonsense" was bought and paid for through numerous contract cycles and should not be thrown away on a whim because you can't be bothered to do some basic reading of the PWA, SRH, and forum/FB pages and understand the rules. 2-4 hours of time will pay you literally thousands of extra dollars throughout your career and give you more time at home because you will know the rules and force scheduling to abide by our PWA.
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