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Does the new AA have to give up one PHL-LHR slot, and if so will we go after ;)the slot?
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Originally Posted by sailingfun
(Post 1535451)
There is nothing involved in this process that will lower the companies pilot block hour costs.
the company? Trans con and Caribbean turns come to mind... |
Originally Posted by sinca3
(Post 1535940)
Doesn't the ability to fly up to 9hrs cut cost for
the company? Trans con and Caribbean turns come to mind... |
Originally Posted by Timbo
(Post 1535976)
They'll save money on hotels in the Caribbean no doubt, and on the west coast if they can fly all the west coast stuff from the east as a turn instead of a layover or DH. That cuts crews required as well. That was the whole point of going up to a 9 hour block day.
On the domestic side there will be no turns. I am amazed at how often this keeps getting posted by experienced pilots. Simply go look at the block times from any East coast destination to the west coast. JFK-LAX is just under 12 hours JFK-SFO is over 12 hours JFK-SLC over 10 hours ATL-LAX is over 9 hours There will not be any East Coast to West Coast turns. 9 hours does not allow for it. There might be some turns from DTW however even then I suspect you wont see it often. When you build trips if you pull the long legs out for turns it becomes very difficult to build the rest of the trips without increasing credit time. You could as a example build a ATL to Vegas turn. Its just a minute or two under 8:30. If you take those legs out of the trip mix for turns you more then likely see a increase in credit on other trips. You also run the risk of the crew going 32 minutes over on the first leg and having to cancel the 2nd leg. The whole oh my god we will be flying giant turns is much ado about nothing! Even if they could fly all those cities as turns it has no effect on manning. Again this seems to be a urban legend. If you fly a 4 day trip doing transcon there is normally no credit in the trip. It takes the exact same number of pilots to fly it as a 4 day or as 2 turns. Manning is very simply. Block hours plus credit hours equals manning. Turns will have no impact on the block hour number and the long legged trips generally have no credit hence no change in manning. |
Originally Posted by Sink r8
(Post 1535794)
Re:
and: How does management use their leverage without violating the status quo? The company has the option to do some of those things, but they haven't. We have the option of not flying overtime, and we certainly have the obligation of not flying sick. But when current numbers diverge from past practices, injunctions are sought, and obtained. On the flip side we are still under a court order from a prior job action. The company has no such restraint. |
Originally Posted by sailingfun
(Post 1535994)
There is no status quo when we are not in negotiations. On top of that the FAR change forces every airline to make adjustments in how they schedule. You would not win that even if we were in bitter contract negotiations.
On the flip side we are still under a court order from a prior job action. The company has no such restraint. Carl |
Originally Posted by sailingfun
(Post 1535994)
There is no status quo when we are not in negotiations. On top of that the FAR change forces every airline to make adjustments in how they schedule. You would not win that even if we were in bitter contract negotiations.
On the flip side we are still under a court order from a prior job action. The company has no such restraint. |
Originally Posted by Carl Spackler
(Post 1535999)
A court order against Delta pilots as represented by ALPA.
CARL |
Originally Posted by acl65pilot
(Post 1532315)
HIPPA protects you from your Doctor sending your medical records to someone without your approval. You can release your medical records to anyone and that is not a violation of HIPPA. What you do with your medical records is up to you but even "Delta's" doctor is not employed by Delta and Delta never sees those medical records, he just reviews them and gives thumbs up or down to Delta.
Call Contract Admin and ask them, I bet they have an answer for you. |
Originally Posted by tim123
(Post 1536044)
Is that answer going to be the truth?Didn't George say contract admin told him a copy of a prescription would work for sick verification?The company said no to the prescription,so what good is contract admin?
Obviously it depends on the prescription. Lots of people fly with prescriptions to manage cholesterol. I have yet to learn of a single example of anything reasonable not being verified, even when the pilot has not exactly followed the requirements. |
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