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Originally Posted by tsquare
(Post 1549145)
Have any of ya'll noticed that Peyton wears his uniform hat when he is standing on the sidelines? :D
So, perhaps we could have gate agents or flight attendants do the same:p Best cure for no hats was one that one of my previous airlines employed. They saw you in the terminal with no hat, one arrived via UPS about five days later. Shipping and cost of hat deducted from your next pay check. After guys started getting quite a hat collection, they started wearing them. |
Originally Posted by Spudhauler
(Post 1549167)
Flamer, didn't they issue a letter stating that they told the company they expect the contract to be followed until such time as something can be negotiated? Thought it was pretty much status quo since our contract is a legally binding document.
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Originally Posted by Flamer
(Post 1549176)
Yes, but I am asking more along the lines of education to the pilot group. There are a lot of reserve pilots that really don't understand the contract. The company will apply a lot of pressure to trick pilots into acknowledging early. Just wondering why DALPA didn't say "hey, all reserve pilots please do this _______"?
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Since when does the Detroit Lions use United as their charter company? Saw the 757-300 in MSP today and it was headed back to Detroit. Pretty sad this isn't on Delta.
Anyways....GO PACK GO! |
Originally Posted by Flamer
(Post 1549164)
Serious question. Is there a reason ALPA has not been explicit in detail as to when folks on reserve under 117 rules are required to acknowledge trips and what that means for 117 rest?
Check out the FAR 117 Resource Library link on the home page of the Delta pilot website. Lots of info including a webinar, Scheduling Alerts like Scheduling Alert 13-10-FAR 117 Fitness for Duty and Reserve Rules, FTDT Training Presentation, an FAR 117 Video, etc. |
Originally Posted by tsquare
(Post 1549145)
Have any of ya'll noticed that Peyton wears his uniform hat when he is standing on the sidelines? :D
His "uniform" hat is a helmet. Tr |
Originally Posted by Reroute
(Post 1549233)
Check out the FAR 117 Resource Library link on the home page of the Delta pilot website. Lots of info including a webinar, Scheduling Alerts like Scheduling Alert 13-10-FAR 117 Fitness for Duty and Reserve Rules, FTDT Training Presentation, an FAR 117 Video, etc.
Bottom line is this. We already know that the last day-off schedule check is gone as of Dec 31. If a pilot is on reserve Jan 1 he or she starts long call at midnight. Here is the central issue. Right now, contractually that pilot can remove himself from all contact with the company at midnight, so long as he checks his schedule NLT 0900, in a using a most-conservative assumption that exactly at midnight scheduling assigned a trip with a 1200 report--and contractually a reserve must acknowledge a trip assignment NLT 3 hours prior to report. Steve Dickson is trying to decree by memo that that provision of the contract really doesn't apply any more due to FAR 117. ALPA certainly disagrees. So...what is a reserve who goes on long call at midnight on Jan 1 supposed to assume in terms of his contact obligation? Explicit and specific guidance would be welcome. |
Originally Posted by Denny Crane
(Post 1548929)
Thanks RockyBoy. I'm trying it right now but it looks like it's hit a glitch while downloading the Flight Time Logs. I'll see what happens...
Denny |
Originally Posted by duder
(Post 1549206)
Since when does the Detroit Lions use United as their charter company? Saw the 757-300 in MSP today and it was headed back to Detroit. Pretty sad this isn't on Delta.
Anyways....GO PACK GO! PS Cutler sucks. |
Originally Posted by Herkflyr
(Post 1549241)
You aren't really grasping the crux of the question, and ALPA hasn't been as explicit as many of us would like.
Bottom line is this. We already know that the last day-off schedule check is gone as of Dec 31. If a pilot is on reserve Jan 1 he or she starts long call at midnight. Here is the central issue. Right now, contractually that pilot can remove himself from all contact with the company at midnight, so long as he checks his schedule NLT 0900, in a using a most-conservative assumption that exactly at midnight scheduling assigned a trip with a 1200 report--and contractually a reserve must acknowledge a trip assignment NLT 3 hours prior to report. Steve Dickson is trying to decree by memo that that provision of the contract really doesn't apply any more due to FAR 117. ALPA certainly disagrees. So...what is a reserve who goes on long call at midnight on Jan 1 supposed to assume in terms of his contact obligation? Explicit and specific guidance would be welcome. |
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