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Here is specifically what the union put out. The provisions permit the Company to negotiate with the DCI carriers and aircraft suppliers to replace 50-seat aircraft with 76-seat aircraft on approximately a 3- for-1 basis. Absent that ability, the Company will be obligated to expend significant amounts to perform required maintenance on, and to continue to fly the 50-seat aircraft. Without the reduction in small jet capacity, they have no need to add mainline capacity. |
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Note that the July and August bid periods will now each be 30-day bid periods. This will have the effect of reducing the difference in flying between peak and non-peak months to an average of 19%. (The start and/or end dates of a bid period during other times of the year may be altered by mutual agreement between the Director – Crew Resources and the MEC Scheduling Committee Chairman. Any such change will always be made known well in advance of initial line bidding for that bid period.) The second piece of the solution is to widen the ALV range by two hours to increase the amount of flex within a category. The range will be increased from 72:00 – 82:00 to 72:00 – 84:00. This results in a 17% difference and will allow for more consistent staffing and reserve levels throughout the year. Correspondingly, the allowable TLV range, which is a rolling 12-month average of the ALV, will be raised from 74:00 – 79:00 to 75:00 – 80:00. Put another way, the bid period changes reduce the gap between summer and winter flying from 22% to 19%, and the ALV/TLV changes further reduce the gap to 17%. These changes will likely result in a contractual staffing reduction of approximately 300 pilots. There were numerous trades in contract 2012. Some good for us and some bad for us. Overall the contract was job neutral. Here is a summary of the contract. Some items were quite significant for a large groups of pilots especially reserves. Reserve got a large pay boost(over 20% at amendable date) and better work rules. The changes in disability alone put 100,000 in my pocket and much more for pilots not able to return to work. Under the expedited process and after two months of negotiations, an agreement on an amended PWA was reached seven months prior to the amendable date. hhAllows the company to take delivery of additional 76-seat aircraft when the company takes delivery of additional B-717 aircraft hhEstablished hard overall cap of 450 Delta Connection aircraft (including large turboprops) when the company takes delivery of additional 76-seat aircraft hhEstablished minimum required ratio of flying between mainline and Delta Connection hhEliminated conversion of 70-seat aircraft to 76-seat aircraft based on mainline growth hhAlitalia added to the AF/KLM JV after joining the JV in 2010 hhEstablished tighter restrictions on the number of Delta passengers allowed to fly on codeshare partners hhImproved foreign ownership protection hhImproved seniority list instructor language hhExpanded and improved furlough protections hhPay: yh4% increase in hourly rates on July 1, 2012 (6 months prior to amendable date) yh8.5% increase in hourly rates on January 1, 2013 yh3% increase in hourly rates on January 1, 2014 yh3% increase in hourly rates on January 1, 2015 hhCQ and distributed training pay increased hhVacation pay increased hhInternational pay increased hhPer diem increased hhDC contribution increased hhProfit sharing reduced to a 10% payout of pretax income up to $2.5B to offset the first year pay raise hhReserve guarantee and number of awarded X-days increased, along with max reserve hhIncreased yearly sick credit to 270 hours for pilots with 20-plus years of service hhDeleted the 75% pay provision for sick leave hhPlaced restrictions of when a pilot may be required to verify their sickness hhHotel, laundry, and relocation benefits improved hhDelta Pilots Medical Plan improved hhDisability benefits improved hhALV window increased from 72–82 to 72–84 hhChanged summer month bid period dates hhPBS staffing formula improved hhEstablished early retirement program hhIntroduced a new rig—average daily guarantee (ADG) of 4:30 The Key to contract 2012 was it broke the logjam of contracts at all the airlines mired in bankruptcy language. When discussing overall pilot productivity after contract 2018 we were back to almost exactly the same block hours per pilot as pre chapter 11. We clawed back a lot over 11 years and set the industry standard on every contract. |
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Which is why NC direction is absolutely critical. Those flies have to be dug out in the turns at the table. The next LEC elections in each council will decide the folks giving that direction. We need to be absolutely certain “we” have kicked the tires on all the candidates. Quote:
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Great info Sailing. One thing to remember about C2012 was that yes while looking back in may seem pretty weak, but at the time it was a vast improvement over what we had recently been operating under. Specifically LOA 46, LOA 51, and the first Joint Contract - Turds all. Does anyone remember 10.5 hour 3 day trips? Vacation days valued at 3 hours? I think 777A pay was also down to abut $190/hour. Let that sink in - Greenslip pay on the 777 was about equal to straight 7ER pay now. Unless that was during the brief time when GS's were reduced to 150% in which case a GS on the 777 was less than straight 73N pay now. Ouch! The list goes on.
C2012 started a string of improvments that resulted in our current PWA. It took 18 years but we have clawed back to mostly where we were pre BK. Some stuff is still lagging but some things now are vastly superior - reserve being one that stands out. Scoop |
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