Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
I don't recall the Delta pilot group rejecting a TA. If you consider pay rates and working conditions to other passenger airlines today, I believe a strong case could be made that Delta is the best airline to work for. This time may be different, but if all the previous yes votes have helped result in our current relative prosperity, why do you feel so confident that a yes vote on this TA will be so detrimental?
I will overlook everything that tells me this will screw my career and permanently damage the plight of most Delta/Major airline pilots. Now I'm voting YES. Yay.
Screw the profession.
Screw our health and family life.
Screw any advancement for another ten years while we continue to shrink (do more with less pilots).
Screw it all all. As long as I get a few more beans. Maybe I can grow a bean stock and find riches at the top. That's a good career plan I think. It makes as much sense as you do.
OK Slowplay, Pineapple Guy or whatever management/ALPA stooge you happen to be....
I will overlook everything that tells me this will screw my career and permanently damage the plight of most Delta/Major airline pilots. Now I'm voting YES. Yay.
Screw the profession.
Screw our health and family life.
Screw any advancement for another ten years while we continue to shrink (do more with less pilots).
Screw it all all. As long as I get a few more beans. Maybe I can grow a bean stock and find riches at the top. That's a good career plan I think. It makes as much sense as you do.
I will overlook everything that tells me this will screw my career and permanently damage the plight of most Delta/Major airline pilots. Now I'm voting YES. Yay.
Screw the profession.
Screw our health and family life.
Screw any advancement for another ten years while we continue to shrink (do more with less pilots).
Screw it all all. As long as I get a few more beans. Maybe I can grow a bean stock and find riches at the top. That's a good career plan I think. It makes as much sense as you do.
Jack;
Honest observation here:
This sort of post is not going to win any votes to your opinion. Argue the facts. Go though the ta and cite parts of the contract pilots can reference to make your case.
255 hard cap now.
Then we will increase hard cap to 325 after this TA passes.
And then in three years on the next TA as these RJs are rolling off the assembly line we'll get Delta to shrink the hard cap to... wait... what's the long term plan again on shrinking the large RJ fleet???

FTB
Willing to give up a $20k raise with questionable work rules now, to get a better TA.
Then we will increase hard cap to 325 after this TA passes.
And then in three years on the next TA as these RJs are rolling off the assembly line we'll get Delta to shrink the hard cap to... wait... what's the long term plan again on shrinking the large RJ fleet???

FTB
Willing to give up a $20k raise with questionable work rules now, to get a better TA.
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From: B757/767
On one hand you say that the 50s can't be parked because they're in long term agreements, and on the other hand you say the 70s will be converted to 76s. Those 70s are in long term agreements, also, who is going to do the conversion?
The number you control is 255. 255 RJs with more than 50 seats in the current agreement no matter the mainline fleet size, and an increase to 325 in the TA.
The number you control is 255. 255 RJs with more than 50 seats in the current agreement no matter the mainline fleet size, and an increase to 325 in the TA.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 12,831
Likes: 172
From: window seat
You know when it comes to the ratios, I could understand 1.0 or a 1.5 or 1.75 or 2.0... but 1.56?
That's where I worry that the ratio is designed to achieve DCI 450 x 1.56 = whatever that is, which is probably where we are now.
Outside of DCI 0, I'd rather keep the current 255/3:1 PWA language and add in a ratio based on the number of mainline aircraft seating 150 or less. Such that if a GTF ever makes its way down to the 50 seaters they'll hit a ratio limit that protects mainline aircraft from the very aircraft that threaten them the most.
That's where I worry that the ratio is designed to achieve DCI 450 x 1.56 = whatever that is, which is probably where we are now.
Outside of DCI 0, I'd rather keep the current 255/3:1 PWA language and add in a ratio based on the number of mainline aircraft seating 150 or less. Such that if a GTF ever makes its way down to the 50 seaters they'll hit a ratio limit that protects mainline aircraft from the very aircraft that threaten them the most.
Gets Weekends Off
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I'm a reserve international F/O living at the base. I'm not going to vote based on what other people think, but I'm open to being influenced by them. My own interests are this: The raise is appealing, the reserve enhancements are appealing. I'm not concerned if a scope issue delays my upgrade to captain, but I would be concerned if there is a credible threat to junior guys being furloughed. I think there is a potential to vote no and work for a better deal. I think it is equally likely that a no vote could result in a delayed, less attractive agreement if market conditions change. I think there is a hard to quantify value to good will. All in all, I think the agreement is as good as our union leadership thinks it could get and entails less risk, because it can be renegotiated in 3 years. I guess the only thing that's going to sway me is the credible threat to the jobs of junior delta pilots.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 12,831
Likes: 172
From: window seat
If DL buys another airline with RJ feed, there is a 110% chance DALPA will settle for a higher limit at the very least prorated to the combined totals, unless another deal is reached to park 50's in exchange for even more 90's, which will be called the same victory this TA is being called WRT that.
It will be sold because of the "equity stake" and more small raises and maybe a few things here or there (back down to 6 sort calls?) followed by the promise to "get what we can now and "get em next time". We have got to start learning from history.
Minimum daily guarantee = 5 hours
You bid for Short Call or Long Call and...
Short Call (2 hour notification) gets paid 79 hours
Long Call (11 hour notification) gets paid 75 hours
Long Call can be converted to Short Call 4 times per month. The first time the pilot is paid an additional 2 hours. The next 3 times the pilot is paid an additional hour for each conversion. Permission must be granted by the pilot for any conversions greater than 4.
Pilot must be provided first class on deadhead any time first class seats are available on any flight.
Pilot must be provided first class on a deadhead on ANY flight over five hours. This also includes consecutive deadhead legs adding up to 5 hours (all those flights need to be first class).
Off Days of Reserve. A reserve pilot will receive at least two 2 day periods in a row, one row of 3 days, and one group of five days in a row off during the calendar month of reserve.
Any food available for purchase by passengers in the main cabin must be offered to deadheading pilots free of charge.
If onboard internet is available on any airplane it must be made available to deadheading pilots free of charge.
Crew meals are provided to the pilots (no flight time restrictions). These meals are chosen during quarterly meetings between the MEC and the company. (Pilots basically have a crew meal on every flight long or short).
Maximum hours for reserves is below what this contract proposes.
and so on and so forth....
I have done that. Since DALPA is championing how great this is and ignoring the stagnation that I just pointed out in the post you didn't like. Lets look at a just few things Alaska airlines has in their contract that are ahead of what this new proposal even promises.
Minimum daily guarantee = 5 hours
You bid for Short Call or Long Call and...
Short Call (2 hour notification) gets paid 79 hours
Long Call (11 hour notification) gets paid 75 hours
Long Call can be converted to Short Call 4 times per month. The first time the pilot is paid an additional 2 hours. The next 3 times the pilot is paid an additional hour for each conversion. Permission must be granted by the pilot for any conversions greater than 4.
Pilot must be provided first class on deadhead any time first class seats are available on any flight.
Pilot must be provided first class on a deadhead on ANY flight over five hours. This also includes consecutive deadhead legs adding up to 5 hours (all those flights need to be first class).
Off Days of Reserve. A reserve pilot will receive at least two 2 day periods in a row, one row of 3 days, and one group of five days in a row off during the calendar month of reserve.
Any food available for purchase by passengers in the main cabin must be offered to deadheading pilots free of charge.
If onboard internet is available on any airplane it must be made available to deadheading pilots free of charge.
Crew meals are provided to the pilots (no flight time restrictions). These meals are chosen during quarterly meetings between the MEC and the company. (Pilots basically have a crew meal on every flight long or short).
Maximum hours for reserves is below what this contract proposes.
and so on and so forth....
Minimum daily guarantee = 5 hours
You bid for Short Call or Long Call and...
Short Call (2 hour notification) gets paid 79 hours
Long Call (11 hour notification) gets paid 75 hours
Long Call can be converted to Short Call 4 times per month. The first time the pilot is paid an additional 2 hours. The next 3 times the pilot is paid an additional hour for each conversion. Permission must be granted by the pilot for any conversions greater than 4.
Pilot must be provided first class on deadhead any time first class seats are available on any flight.
Pilot must be provided first class on a deadhead on ANY flight over five hours. This also includes consecutive deadhead legs adding up to 5 hours (all those flights need to be first class).
Off Days of Reserve. A reserve pilot will receive at least two 2 day periods in a row, one row of 3 days, and one group of five days in a row off during the calendar month of reserve.
Any food available for purchase by passengers in the main cabin must be offered to deadheading pilots free of charge.
If onboard internet is available on any airplane it must be made available to deadheading pilots free of charge.
Crew meals are provided to the pilots (no flight time restrictions). These meals are chosen during quarterly meetings between the MEC and the company. (Pilots basically have a crew meal on every flight long or short).
Maximum hours for reserves is below what this contract proposes.
and so on and so forth....
You make good points, but many may stop reading if you get frustrated and mad. This is a fight of attrition.
I will try this again. Let me ask you a question first. Answer in your own mind. What year are you? I will use a 7 year Comair captain on the 76s that makes $79/hour. Factoring in DAL vs CO benefits package, I would highly doubt if we could fly it for $50/hour and remain competitive...
Comair has no 7 year Captains. Our bottom 76 Captain is at 22 years, and every 76 Captain at Comair is maxed out at $105/hr (and a pile of vacation). It doesn't derail your argument, but I wanted to correct the record.
But then there will be those that say.. get 'em here and THEN worry about the pay. Sure. That rate would be so far away from what would be acceptable to the group so as to render it practically unobtainable (I want to live next door to Michelle Pfeiffer, but no matter how badly I want that I am pretty sure I could never get her neighbor to sell to me for what I think is fair). Next question. Once they are here... at $50/hour.. no let's say we could get current CO rates of $79... would you be willing to go to war over THAT?? Really? We would have NEW HIRES in the left seat of that airplane.
Delta already has NEW HIRES in the left seat of that airplane (the 70), but their hat says GoJetsss. Well, they would if they had hats. Wouldn't it be smarter to have Delta new hires than GoJetsss new hires in the left seat of any plane carrying Delta passengers?
Comair has no 7 year Captains. Our bottom 76 Captain is at 22 years, and every 76 Captain at Comair is maxed out at $105/hr (and a pile of vacation). It doesn't derail your argument, but I wanted to correct the record.
But then there will be those that say.. get 'em here and THEN worry about the pay. Sure. That rate would be so far away from what would be acceptable to the group so as to render it practically unobtainable (I want to live next door to Michelle Pfeiffer, but no matter how badly I want that I am pretty sure I could never get her neighbor to sell to me for what I think is fair). Next question. Once they are here... at $50/hour.. no let's say we could get current CO rates of $79... would you be willing to go to war over THAT?? Really? We would have NEW HIRES in the left seat of that airplane.
Delta already has NEW HIRES in the left seat of that airplane (the 70), but their hat says GoJetsss. Well, they would if they had hats. Wouldn't it be smarter to have Delta new hires than GoJetsss new hires in the left seat of any plane carrying Delta passengers?
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