Airline Pilot Central Forums
17570  18070  18470  18520  18560  18566  18567  18568  18569  18570  18571  18572  18573  18574  18580  18620  18670  19070  19570 
Page 18570 of 20174
Go to

Airline Pilot Central Forums (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/)
-   Delta (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/delta/)
-   -   Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta? (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/delta/36912-any-latest-greatest-about-delta.html)

Tummy 10-16-2015 01:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RJcursed4life (Post 1993924)
Do we get a discount if we purchase stock through the employee purchase program?

I don't think so. It looks like the only benefits we get are not having to pay commission on the purchase and paying a discounted commission on any sales.

iceman49 10-16-2015 04:45 PM

Good thing we are an all Microsoft company.:rolleyes:

Apple's Macs make life easier for IBM - Fortune

Justdoinmyjob 10-16-2015 08:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flare (Post 1992540)
Or is this just how we do it at DAL?

Be thankful you get it by the 15th. Contractually, they don't have to publish the bid results til the 17th.

80ktsClamp 10-17-2015 09:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Justdoinmyjob (Post 1994167)
Be thankful you get it by the 15th. Contractually, they don't have to publish the bid results til the 17th.

Yup. I don't get the heartburn over this the last few months. I've been here 8.5 years, and it has varied between the 14th to even after the deadline on the 17th. It's averaged out for FO schedules to sometime on the 15th.

If you really want to wait for your schedule, work in the schoolhouse. It comes out no earlier than 1600 on the 17th...unless it doesn't. (now it's the 20th!)

trico 10-17-2015 05:03 PM

I was staying at the long layover hotel in NYC during that big blizzard about 6-7 years ago. The next day I walked right down the centerline of Madison Avenue for about 6 blocks; not a moving vehicle in sight. This thread is like that today.

bluejuice71 10-17-2015 07:35 PM

Anyone know where you go to bid golden X days for reserve? Have never done it & can't figure out where it is in iCrew. Thanks!

Denny Crane 10-17-2015 07:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bluejuice71 (Post 1994699)
Anyone know where you go to bid golden X days for reserve? Have never done it & can't figure out where it is in iCrew. Thanks!

Go to icrew. Select the bids tab along the top, select initial bids. You can take it from there.

Denny

Purple Drank 10-18-2015 03:15 AM

This seems frivolous. What law does it break?

Love the butthurt from the guy who spent $350k to kill a black rhino. Judas Priest, charter a jet.

It's also completely spineless for Delta to roll over for the loony low-info crowd by instituting this policy to begin with.

I'm curious to hear what our resident legal big brains think... Thx

Quote:

Delta Air Lines sued over ban on shipping safari trophies
By Robert Wilonsky
Dallas Morning News

In August, shortly after a dentist from Bloomington killed a lion named Cecil in Zimbabwe, Delta Air Lines joined a growing list of carriers that had decided not to transport game-hunting "trophies."

In a brief statement issued Aug. 3, the Atlanta-based carrier said that "effective immediately, Delta, the primary carrier serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, will officially ban shipment of all lion, leopard, elephant, rhinoceros and buffalo trophies worldwide as freight."

That decision, and similar ones by other airlines, made close to 400,000 petition-signers extremely happy, but angered conservation-hunting groups who maintain it's necessary to kill a few animals to save a population.

Count the Dallas Safari Club among those organizations so upset that on Thursday they sued Delta in Dallas federal court, insisting that a ban on the shipping of game trophies will, among other things, harm their conservation efforts and punish villages relying on tourist revenue. They also claim the ban discriminates against well-meaning hunters and "an unpopular but non-hazardous type of cargo," and that "not only is Delta's embargo unconscionable -- it is illegal."

Also named as a plaintiff is Dallas resident Corey Knowlton, the man who paid the safari club $350,000 for a trip to Namibia and a permit to kill an endangered black rhino.

Says the suit: Knowlton "has hunted all the Big Five and, in May 2015 hunted a black rhino in Namibia. To participate in this hunt, Mr. Knowlton contributed $350,000 to Namibia's Game Products Trust Fund, to be used exclusively for black rhino protection and recovery. Namibia's Ministry of Environment and Tourism would not use these funds until Mr. Knowlton's trophy was imported into the U.S. Delta unlawfully refused Mr. Knowlton's request to ship the trophy from Southern Africa, further delaying the import and the Ministry's expenditure of these much-needed conservation funds."

National Public Radio reported this year that the handful of permits issued annually by Namibia's Ministry of Environment and Tourism are intended to remove from the population "older rhinos that are no longer able to breed but still pose a deadly threat to younger male." The money raised from the sale of the permits goes toward conservation and anti-poaching efforts.

Dallas Safari Club and the other plaintiffs -- including Louisiana-based Conservation Force, the Houston Safari Club, Zimbabwe's CAMPFIRE Association and the Tanzania Hunting Operators Association -- claim the ban will cause a "catastrophic" chain reaction.

"Delta's embargo threatens the tourist safari hunting industry's entire user-pay, sustainable use-based conservation paradigm," says the suit. "It would be catastrophic to people and wildlife to eliminate the most habitat, prey base, operating budget revenue, and community incentives. Wildlife numbers will plummet. But this will occur if Delta continues to discriminate against the cargo of U.S. hunters. Rather than celebrating the conservation contributions of U.S. tourist safari hunters, Delta is vilifying them by refusing to transport the fruits of the hunt: trophies of the prized Big Five (elephant, rhino, lion, leopard, and buffalo). Delta is treating these legally acquired trophies as if they were contraband.

"America's business, professional, and civil leaders -- many of whom are frequent fliers -- should not be lumped with traffickers (unlawful trade). The stigma will understandably affect their willingness to hunt in Africa. Because it dissuades lawful hunters, Delta's embargo jeopardizes the benefits of tourist hunting and its centrality in the conservation programs of African range states. And worse, the embargo deprives Big Five species of essential conservation funding and support."

Delta did not respond Friday to a request for comment.

bluejuice71 10-18-2015 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Denny Crane (Post 1994704)
Go to icrew. Select the bids tab along the top, select initial bids. You can take it from there.

Denny

Thank you!!!

newKnow 10-18-2015 08:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Purple Drank (Post 1994770)
This seems frivolous. What law does it break?

Love the butthurt from the guy who spent $350k to kill a black rhino. Judas Priest, charter a jet.

It's also completely spineless for Delta to roll over for the loony low-info crowd by instituting this policy to begin with.

I'm curious to hear what our resident legal big brains think... Thx

What law, or constitutional right, is Delta breaking by instituting the policy? I can't think of one.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:40 AM.
17570  18070  18470  18520  18560  18566  18567  18568  18569  18570  18571  18572  18573  18574  18580  18620  18670  19070  19570 
Page 18570 of 20174
Go to


User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons

Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.

Website Copyright ©2000 - 2017 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands