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Originally Posted by gloopy
(Post 2380936)
So they have to "prove" they drove/flew/train/bussed? 80 times? Over all those years?
Please. Hold them accountable for what they actually got busted for within fair reasonableness. Absolutely. But assumptions of guilt based on them not being able to "prove" something in the past is unreasonable. Sorry but we gotta dig in and defend them against that BS. I have never understood pilots. If we were in any other occupation, and you had people around you not pulling their weight and constantly ignoring the rules, you would be ****ed. Why do you support people who are so far out of bounds it's inexcusable? I'm tired of the company wanting changes to the contract because a few bad apples are ignoring the rules. Frankly, I think we are all better off without those pilots. |
Jumpseat Question
I may need to jump-seat from Canada to the US in the future and have a few questions:
Can I sit upfront if the plane is full on Mainline, DCI, or offline? Anything else that might prove useful would be appreciated. Thanks Scoop |
Originally Posted by Xray678
(Post 2381045)
BS?? I support any pilot who is trying to do the right thing, but ends of out of position, misses a trip, or whatever. But when guys blatantly ignore the rules, no I don't support them.
I have never understood pilots. If we were in any other occupation, and you had people around you not pulling their weight and constantly ignoring the rules, you would be ****ed. Why do you support people who are so far out of bounds it's inexcusable? I'm tired of the company wanting changes to the contract because a few bad apples are ignoring the rules. Frankly, I think we are all better off without those pilots. For every missed SC, some other pilot got stuck flying while these guys were flaunting it and collecting pay. IF all that we've heard about these fellows is true, I say goodbye and thanks for the line number bump. |
Originally Posted by Scoop
(Post 2381291)
I may need to jump-seat from Canada to the US in the future and have a few questions:
Can I sit upfront if the plane is full on Mainline, DCI, or offline? Anything else that might prove useful would be appreciated. Thanks Scoop Mainline, yes. I believe the check-in is 90 minutes prior at the gate. DCI or offline depends solely on their guidance. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Originally Posted by Scoop
(Post 2381004)
It depends on what kind of data the company has on them.
OTOH, if they DO have proof of an actual offense, then use that actual instance to pursue fair and appropriate discipline. But sorry, they simply don't get to pull years of non rev records and use that as comprehensive proof of past crimes. That's insane and cannot be tolerated. It will be interesting to see what "proposed changes" to SC/reserve come up in the next section 6. So can we. I'd actually be somewhat receptive to some sort of reasonable verification system for SC...if and only if it included a reduction in monthly SC's. Otherwise, not interested. Suppose every time these guys have a trip they leave a easily verifiable digital trail - KCM, Jump seat, Non-rev etc - every time they have a trip and show up in base. Yet for years there is Zip, nada, squat for every SC. I will say innocent until proven guilty not the other way around Agree. but the fact is these guys were out of position when they were needed and apparently out of position for years. The guys that abuse it by sitting SC way out of position are punks and should get serious time off for even early offenses. But we just can't use this kind of overzealous nonsense to prove guilt because they can't prove innocence. Not for this, not for anything. How much bargaining capitol do you suppose the union should spend on guys that were cheating? But representation, even aggressive and expensive, isn't "bargaining capital" and we can't EVER allow the company to take hostages for any issue in an attempt to use as a bargaining tool. It will be very easy to see if this was a one off or if these guys were gaming the system for years. Oh and how many guys take the Bus and train across country to commute to work - I hope that you are not really serious here. We need to throw everything we have at defending against that sort of insanity. Not because the few guys in question who actually got busted for being idiots (and screwing their fellow pilots) "deserve" to get off (they don't and they won't) but because process matters (a LOT) and we can't stand for this type of process. Period. |
Gloopy,
Sooooooo, if the company cannot find any instance in the past 40+ short call assignments of a pilot using nonrev, kcm (etc) or asking for receipts of travel on other modes of transportation such as credit card statements, then the pilot should get a pass? I don't think so. You cannot tell me that there will not be some kind of paper trail to prove commuting to at least half of those short calls. You cannot, with a straight face, tell me that a pilot who lives States away from his base is going to pay for his own transportation to sit short call 40+ times and not EVER use kcm or nonrev. And even if s/he did, there would be some kind of paper trail. As an example, if one decided to buy a ticket on another airline, not only would s/he probably use kcm to get through security, there would also be a paper trail via paying with a CC. How many people pay cash now..... Denny |
Originally Posted by Scoop
(Post 2381291)
I may need to jump-seat from Canada to the US in the future and have a few questions:
Can I sit upfront if the plane is full on Mainline, DCI, or offline? Anything else that might prove useful would be appreciated.j Thanks Scoop - You need to be at the ticket/check-in counter at least 75 minutes prior. You will need to pay for the departure tax (roughly $38) for any jumpseat (mainline or DCI) via credit card (no payroll deduct for J/S up there). - As for offline, Air Canada requires you to call their 800 number to list and pre-pay the departure tax. - You can ride in the cockpit only on mainline. - Global Entry saves time with US Customs pre-clearance. NEXUS saves time by getting you into the Canadian equivalent of TSA-Pre (and gets you Global Entry for $50...half-the cost of Global Entry. Weird, eh?) - If you are in uniform you will get into a priority line but Canadians are freakishly compliant and do not believe in "crew cutting" so you will have to suck it up, eh? That's all that comes to mind at this point....Good luck/Bon chance. 😊 |
Originally Posted by FL370esq
(Post 2381361)
Let's see:
- You need to be at the ticket/check-in counter at least 75 minutes prior. You will need to pay for the departure tax (roughly $38) for any jumpseat (mainline or DCI) via credit card (no payroll deduct for J/S up there). - As for offline, Air Canada requires you to call their 800 number to list and pre-pay the departure tax. - You can ride in the cockpit only on mainline. - Global Entry saves time with US Customs pre-clearance. NEXUS saves time by getting you into the Canadian equivalent of TSA-Pre (and gets you Global Entry for $50...half-the cost of Global Entry. Weird, eh?) - If you are in uniform you will get into a priority line but Canadians are freakishly compliant and do not believe in "crew cutting" so you will have to suck it up, eh? That's all that comes to mind at this point....Good luck/Bon chance. 😊 Exactly the info that I need. Thanks. Scoop |
Originally Posted by gloopy
(Post 2381338)
They either have proof or they don't. I'd contend that they absolutely don't in their ridiculous lookback witch hunt nonsense, and take it to the system board, all day long.
Anecdotal, barely circumstantial, and therefore substantively irrelevant. . So if every time they actually showed up in base they leave a digital trail - dozens and dozens of times - every time, but they show zero for short call times, you call that barely circumstantial? Once - yes I agree, twice - lets give them the benefit of the doubt, but dozens and dozens of times over years - not buying it. You totally downplay the company asking for ways to mitigate this in the future: "They can propose anything that they want." I will hope every DAL Pilot will remember that the next time they have to verify a sick call at great inconvenience or some guy gets the run around trying to put in for legitimate MIL LV. There is a reason our contract went downhill in these areas - it is not hypothetical. Stand by for reserve going downhill also. I normally agree with your posts, so much so that someone once joked we were one and the same, but I respectfully disagree with you 100% on this issue. Scoop |
Originally Posted by Scoop
(Post 2381378)
So if every time they actually showed up in base they leave a digital trail - dozens and dozens of times - every time, but they show zero for short call times, you call that barely circumstantial?
Once - yes I agree, twice - lets give them the benefit of the doubt, but dozens and dozens of times over years - not buying it. You totally downplay the company asking for ways to mitigate this in the future: "They can propose anything that they want." I will hope every DAL Pilot will remember that the next time they have to verify a sick call at great inconvenience or some guy gets the run around trying to put in for legitimate MIL LV. There is a reason our contract went downhill in these areas - it is not hypothetical. Stand by for reserve going downhill also. I normally agree with your posts, so much so that someone once joked we were one and the same, but I respectfully disagree with you 100% on this issue. Scoop Process matters, and its simply asinine to discipline someone because they lack a provable affirmative defense. We cannot tolerate that, not now not ever. If someone is a punk (thief, dirt bag, low life, etc) and they acknowledge SC knowing there is zero chance they can make it, I have little sympathy for them and think they should be punished. But this is not the way. Make a (fair and reasonable, but appropriate) example out of those special few who walked that tightrope without a net and fell. But a "you couldn't retroactively prove you commuted in the past therefore you're fired" is an attack so heinous and unreasonable that if we didn't defend it, we'd be coughing up some serious DRF dues in those guy's future suits against the association. This is so clear and obvious and egregious even the least competent, over worked, mentally checked out, bow tie wearing, pony tail public defender would be all over it. ALPA has to be too, because they can not be allowed to go after anyone, for anything, in this fashion. |
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