Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
My thoughts as well. I really don't think there would be any kick back from government officials as there is little overlap. The only real issue would be senators from Montana and Idaho who may complain of a oligopoly in those two states. In fact our combined employee size would still be less than American (I believe)
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 271
Likes: 0
From: NYC 320B
Think about the new combined american.. a network that is smaller than ours, covers much less of the globe, but with thousands upon thousands more employees than we have... there are A LOT of synergies that are going to be happen there. And neither of them are PBS and are going to PBS. The waist tightening we've felt the past few years is going to be nothing like how hard that belt is going to be pulled over there.
IF they reach ISL! HUGE IF...same goes for UAL.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 2,530
Likes: 0
I had heard roughly a 9,000 pilot target about 2 years ago from someone in senior leadership, fwiw.
UAL's ISL will be out in a month or so. They already have a joint CBA.
AA is just starting the process. The AWA/US catfight will be at an end pretty soon, and the joint CBA they are going to be working under establishes the process for the ISL similar to how ours went. The only reason the AWA/US thing happened the way it has is because they did the ISL before the CBA... so they just never got a joint one.
AA is just starting the process. The AWA/US catfight will be at an end pretty soon, and the joint CBA they are going to be working under establishes the process for the ISL similar to how ours went. The only reason the AWA/US thing happened the way it has is because they did the ISL before the CBA... so they just never got a joint one.
Highly doubtful considering Flanigan and Kraby are heading up the hiring process that is in the process of firing up. Notice how much more affirmative SD has been about interviews this fall vice his phrasing on the C2012 sales job.
Moderator
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 7,263
Likes: 105
From: DAL 330
Mr B,
First I will defend DALPA and say that we tired that once and were taken to court - we lost. We can not unilaterally change the status-quo or something like that. The company went after 39, or was it 49 pilots personally via the court system.
Now after defending DALPA on the this very issue I will say DALPA was given a golden opportunity to do exactly what you mentioned and totally blew it - in my opinion one of DALPA's biggest failures.
Let me set the scene. We were in BK. We had over one thousand Pilots furloughed. DCI was hiring like gangbusters. We either had an 1113 hanging over our head or already agreed to LOA 46, not sure. The company reduced Green-slips to 150% pay and did not count leaves, sick leave, vacation etc toward the green slip trigger. In other words we had no status-quo, the company changed our contract.
Did DALPA rise to the occasion and put out the word - "Hey, guys no extra flying with furloughs on the street." Hell No! We were given a total freebie, we had no status-quo, the exact reason we were sued a few years prior and we blew it. Guys were Green-slipping like crazy with over one thousand Delta Pilots on the street. Hiding behind some BS status-quo threat when no such status-quo existed for 150% green-slips. We totally blew it.
Not only that, but sometime around then we agreed to allow retired Pilots, who had received their lump sums, to come back and help Delta man some of the senior positions. The company figured out we were short in some of the senior categories and came to DALPA for help. DALPA of course, obliged.
Not sure what, if anything we got for that. Maybe just the satisfaction of helping an incompetent management team get out from under one of their screw ups.
Not DALPA's finest hour.

Scoop
did anyone else see some A321 lines painted over?
Runs with scissors
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 7,847
Likes: 0
From: Going to hell in a bucket, but enjoying the ride .
From Scoop above:
"First I will defend DALPA and say that we tired that once and were taken to court - we lost. We can not unilaterally change the status-quo or something like that. The company went after 39, or was it 49 pilots personally via the court system."
Scoop, it was indeed 49, who were the entire MEC (about 32 members at the time) plus an additional 17 of us line pilots, who had voiced our displeasure with those flying overtime while we were 18 months into C2K contract negotiations. It was our VP of Flt. Ops. Dave Bushy who targeted the line pilots specifically, based on stuff put on the DALPA boards, emails directly to Bushy and notes left in mailboxes of those who were flying max GS.
The math is pretty simple; if you have 10,000 pilots who fly on average 87-92 hours a month, with the ability to fly to FAR max, that is the same amount of flying time covered as 12,000 pilots all flying a 75 average. So yeah, PBS and no caps have cost at least 2,000 jobs. (10,000 x 90 = 12,000 x 75)
We have given up about 20% of our staffing, by going to PBS with no caps. Remember the battle cry of years past; "More Money, More Time Off"?
The only way you get both, is to fly LESS, not fly more. If we went to a hard cap or 75 tomorrow, the company would have to increase every category (starting with the 747 and 777) by 20%. In a math perfect world, the top 20% of every category below the 747/777 would upgrade to a higher paying seat, and get more days off, and the company would have to hire 2,000 more pilots.
But somehow that battle cry has become twisted to;
More Money! I want to fly 100+ a month!
And THAT is why we are not hiring.
FTB figured it out; bid reserve and use rolling thunder. If I wasn't a commuter, I'd be doing it too!
"First I will defend DALPA and say that we tired that once and were taken to court - we lost. We can not unilaterally change the status-quo or something like that. The company went after 39, or was it 49 pilots personally via the court system."
Scoop, it was indeed 49, who were the entire MEC (about 32 members at the time) plus an additional 17 of us line pilots, who had voiced our displeasure with those flying overtime while we were 18 months into C2K contract negotiations. It was our VP of Flt. Ops. Dave Bushy who targeted the line pilots specifically, based on stuff put on the DALPA boards, emails directly to Bushy and notes left in mailboxes of those who were flying max GS.
The math is pretty simple; if you have 10,000 pilots who fly on average 87-92 hours a month, with the ability to fly to FAR max, that is the same amount of flying time covered as 12,000 pilots all flying a 75 average. So yeah, PBS and no caps have cost at least 2,000 jobs. (10,000 x 90 = 12,000 x 75)
We have given up about 20% of our staffing, by going to PBS with no caps. Remember the battle cry of years past; "More Money, More Time Off"?
The only way you get both, is to fly LESS, not fly more. If we went to a hard cap or 75 tomorrow, the company would have to increase every category (starting with the 747 and 777) by 20%. In a math perfect world, the top 20% of every category below the 747/777 would upgrade to a higher paying seat, and get more days off, and the company would have to hire 2,000 more pilots.
But somehow that battle cry has become twisted to;
More Money! I want to fly 100+ a month!
And THAT is why we are not hiring.
FTB figured it out; bid reserve and use rolling thunder. If I wasn't a commuter, I'd be doing it too!
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
Likes: 15
From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post




