Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
I agree with you on that last sentence. But don't you think it's a slippery slope if the MEC adopts the mentality that they are the smartest guys in the room and that they know better than the pilots they represent? Then you get guys like Slowplay who won't advocate a restorative type pay increase because they view the company and industry financials a certain way and supposedly "know better." More top down stuff. Not good.
Inventory survival kit ..
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Any reason why would keep an order like this secret?
Personally, I've could have seen the discounts, as a result of the 787 delays, compounded into a pretty good deal on some B777 or the next generation B747-8. DAL typically doesn't like being the launch carrier, but seeing as this is the next generation replacement aircraft to an aircraft type currently on property, there could be something to this.
Just not sure as to why they would want to keep it a secret, and as being a public company I figured it would only be a matter of time before it needed to reported.
Personally, I've could have seen the discounts, as a result of the 787 delays, compounded into a pretty good deal on some B777 or the next generation B747-8. DAL typically doesn't like being the launch carrier, but seeing as this is the next generation replacement aircraft to an aircraft type currently on property, there could be something to this.
Just not sure as to why they would want to keep it a secret, and as being a public company I figured it would only be a matter of time before it needed to reported.
Then the food fight over "replacement aircraft" could begin. In this limited case, I'd actually like to have that problem.
Labor Lawyer in WSJ op Ed: Boeing's Threat to American Enterprise
When major firms move to the South, it's usually a harbinger of quality decline. Why let that happen?
Thomas Geoghegan: Boeing's Threat to American Enterprise - WSJ.com
I'd say, hey! Which one of you northies wrote that?!
And this little gem:
But then I'd realize no pilot would write an article to say southerners are too dumb to be left with the responsibility to build an airplane before they did research and realized a huge chunk of the plane is already built there. Labor lawyers, not an impressive bunch.
When major firms move to the South, it's usually a harbinger of quality decline. Why let that happen?
Thomas Geoghegan: Boeing's Threat to American Enterprise - WSJ.com
I'd say, hey! Which one of you northies wrote that?!
And this little gem:
"There are reasons workers in the North get $28 an hour while down in the South they get $14 or even $10. Adam Smith could explain it: "productivity," "skill level," "quality."
Last edited by forgot to bid; 06-20-2011 at 06:17 PM.
Boeing Signs Orders and Commitments for 17 747-8 Intercontinentals
Boeing today during the Paris Air Show announced orders and commitments for 17 of its 747-8 Intercontinental airplanes. The orders, placed by two undisclosed customers, are valued at a combined $5.4 billion at list prices. One customer has committed to 15 of the new passenger version of the 747-8 while the other placed an order for two.
Boeing today during the Paris Air Show announced orders and commitments for 17 of its 747-8 Intercontinental airplanes. The orders, placed by two undisclosed customers, are valued at a combined $5.4 billion at list prices. One customer has committed to 15 of the new passenger version of the 747-8 while the other placed an order for two.


Carl
And they say this next generation is a worthless bunch of kids who feel entitled to everything they want. Meanwhile I watch my in-laws deal with members of the greatest generation who are so demanding and have no problem with pushing kids over a cliff for a social security check.
Truth is, it's not a generation thing that's the problem, it's a gene pool problem.
And too often we bury the best of the gene pool at Arlington and are stuck with pilots who thought it was their right to never save a dime and buy multiple homes, boats, planes and cars and now that the pension disappeared they're willing to throw everyone under a bus for a pay raise most feel is inadequate even if we tightened scope.... ?
The man is a douche bag and if I was a drinker I'd like to propose a toast to all of the senior guys here who bother and enjoy interacting with those hanging on the bottom and stand up for everyone on the list and the one thing that matters most- employment.
Thanks, you guys rock.
Truth is, it's not a generation thing that's the problem, it's a gene pool problem.
And too often we bury the best of the gene pool at Arlington and are stuck with pilots who thought it was their right to never save a dime and buy multiple homes, boats, planes and cars and now that the pension disappeared they're willing to throw everyone under a bus for a pay raise most feel is inadequate even if we tightened scope.... ?
The man is a douche bag and if I was a drinker I'd like to propose a toast to all of the senior guys here who bother and enjoy interacting with those hanging on the bottom and stand up for everyone on the list and the one thing that matters most- employment.
Thanks, you guys rock.
Carl - Still dog paddling in the deep end of the gene pool.
HA!
Now that you've been busted Mr. Soon-to-be Titan of the Skies, I have two questions for you.
A) Alaska already has the Eskimo thing on its tail, why are you putting a wife swapping meat eatin' Eskimo on your tail? (insert green smile guy)
B) Can I start your regional feeder?

FTB ain't no dummy, he knows where the money is in this business.
Now that you've been busted Mr. Soon-to-be Titan of the Skies, I have two questions for you.
A) Alaska already has the Eskimo thing on its tail, why are you putting a wife swapping meat eatin' Eskimo on your tail? (insert green smile guy)
B) Can I start your regional feeder?

FTB ain't no dummy, he knows where the money is in this business.
Not inexplicable really.. it is a money thing, pure and simple. And it is not lost on me that it costs pilot jobs when DGS takes over the simulators, but... I have always had a problem with the fiefdoms that seemed to sprout up when we had seniority list instructors. It would be OK with me I guess if they had to be able to hold what they instructed on, and there were term limits..
Not digging at ya, but there seems to be an overriding generalization by guys that the only way to do things is the one way, and even the way that other airlines do things, despite being successful at it, can't possibly work because of the way the some guys have to squeeze it into THEIR experience, rather than the experience of the people who actually used BOTH systems.
We've already been through this with a number of topics, where once it's explained the way things REALLY worked, the same guys go "huh, yea, I guess that would work pretty well." Some of those topics already discussed include the APA process for bidding, paperwork, and now we get to do it for seniority list instructors.
Certainly, after all the things we gave up in BK, somehow the requirement to use seniority list instructors anytime the motion was on was considered pretty important by the fNWA guys, because we kept it in the contract.
Anyway, enough of that rant. Here's how instructors worked at NWA, with no judgment on other systems:
1) It was a combined department. Training/checking. You might just do OE, or just Sims (which included training, and doing MVs, LOEs, etc), line checks, or all of the above. APDs also did training, and ordinary events along with type rides.
Because it was a combined department, there was a VERY tight feedback loop between the line and training. OE was a complete NON event. There was ZERO "you'll get that on OE". The way you flew the airplane was identical to the way you flew the sim. There were no fiefdoms because there weren't any "fiefs".
There was ZERO variation between instructors. The way you learned things was identical from IP to IP, and from sim to OE.
2) You could only become an instructor for an aircraft that you currently held. If you got displaced, you lost your instructor gig, too. If you got a bid for a new airplane, you lost your instructor gig. You were free to sign up for your new airplane, but no guarantees.
3) You were a line pilot who instructed, NOT an instructor who flew the line once in a while. IPs doing sims were expected to be "in the box" 6 months out of 12, but which 6 were up to the training department (they'd take your requests "under advisement"), but when things were slow, you might fly 8 months. More often you'd do 2 months in the sim and 2 on the line.
4) A regular month was 16 events. Max was 19. "Seat support" counted as an event. Two events a day had restrictions. Events 17,18, and 19 were "overtime" and paid %150.
5) Pay was the max for the month, obviously for the airplane you held, with a $600 override. Hotels were provided, as was PS to work.
Last I heard, SLIPs were worth 350-500 pilots in staffing.
NU
Nu
What a concept. We didn't need a standards department because it was already part of training......
What a concept. We didn't need a standards department because it was already part of training......
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