Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
This level of duplicitous behavior is easy to spot slowplay. Trust me...I'm not the only one who notices. Please continue though.
Carl
Unical has 17.3% of the domestic US market compared to Delta's 16.6%. LUV is at 14.4% and LCC is at 7.9%. I've mentioned all those carriers in my responses; together those 4 make up 55% of the US market. TACA isn't on the list. btw, the 4 largest that I haven't mentioned (AMR, B6, ALA, and AAI) make up less than 25% of US capacity.
The fact that you say this as a high up union official is what troubles so many. You're not just one guy with one vote. You and your opinions are running our union.
Scary stuff.
Carl
Here is the response I received from my friend over at Ryan Air. It looks like it would be hard for a pilot to make over 200k USD regularly. I also am glad I don't work for O'Leary, not to say some of the perks of the airline aren't there...que up more calender pics 
At Ryanair we have absolutely no perks what so ever, except free jump seating. That means no retirement, no insurance (covered in europe by the governments anyway), etc etc. Even when going for the simulator every 6 months, we have to pay for the hotels ourselves. Ryanair say that they pay more then other airlines so they don't have to hire anybody to deal with these things. In reality, pay has decreased every year since I got here. In other words, Ryanair does not reward experience, but only money is on the table. People have accepted this previously, because there have been continued fast growth here which means an upgrade is possible in the 737-800 very quickly, and that is of course more pay then as an FO. We have no pay scales that adjust to years of service. Instead the pay varies according to where you are based. Mr O'leary who is running the show, has had a policy to decrease pay and conditions (days off, paid hotels etc) for every new base opened. We now have close to 50 bases I think, all over Europe. As we have been unsuccessful in convincing everybody that a union is a good thing, this is how it is being on ones own.
It is not so bad working here as the people are great, the flying is fun, professional, and quite challenging at times, and the cabin crew is young, fun and good looking (sometimes not), but looking at our working contract - it is horrible. Currently people are leaving here at the rate of about 30 pilots a month.
As for the money, last year I made about €110.000 ($154,275) gross as a captain here in the 737-800 for almost 4 years.
The taxes are low in Ireland, and it is easy to deduct taxes when not being based there (Im based in Norway), so the tax rate for me is only about 10%..
If you have any more questions, let me know, and good luck with the negotiations!

At Ryanair we have absolutely no perks what so ever, except free jump seating. That means no retirement, no insurance (covered in europe by the governments anyway), etc etc. Even when going for the simulator every 6 months, we have to pay for the hotels ourselves. Ryanair say that they pay more then other airlines so they don't have to hire anybody to deal with these things. In reality, pay has decreased every year since I got here. In other words, Ryanair does not reward experience, but only money is on the table. People have accepted this previously, because there have been continued fast growth here which means an upgrade is possible in the 737-800 very quickly, and that is of course more pay then as an FO. We have no pay scales that adjust to years of service. Instead the pay varies according to where you are based. Mr O'leary who is running the show, has had a policy to decrease pay and conditions (days off, paid hotels etc) for every new base opened. We now have close to 50 bases I think, all over Europe. As we have been unsuccessful in convincing everybody that a union is a good thing, this is how it is being on ones own.
It is not so bad working here as the people are great, the flying is fun, professional, and quite challenging at times, and the cabin crew is young, fun and good looking (sometimes not), but looking at our working contract - it is horrible. Currently people are leaving here at the rate of about 30 pilots a month.
As for the money, last year I made about €110.000 ($154,275) gross as a captain here in the 737-800 for almost 4 years.
The taxes are low in Ireland, and it is easy to deduct taxes when not being based there (Im based in Norway), so the tax rate for me is only about 10%..
If you have any more questions, let me know, and good luck with the negotiations!
As to going to birthday parties, look at the track record of those that attend parties vs those that don't. In SWAPA's merger brochure with AAI there are references to a collaborative, company supportive relationship throughout the document. They have the highest pay rate in the passenger industry. Some Delta guys went to a party pre-merger...our pay rates are higher than all of our passenger airline peers except the aforementioned carrier. All those "old-school" tough unions have lower rates of pay. Thoughts?
Carl
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,539
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Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,539
Likes: 0
Yes you have mentioned all those carriers. You've said we need to compare ourselves to Unical, and LCC and others like AMR. You've specifically stated that we can't use LUV because they have a totally different business model. You've specifically stated that we can't use UPS and FDX because you say they're in different industries.
l
Line Holder
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 67
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ALPA or DPA, for the next contract my priorities are:
1. Scope
2. Pay
3. QOL
4. the Rest
Allow me to coin a "new" acronym: SPQR
By Scope, I mean we take seats back. Status quo would be a fail. We have to change our mentality from scoping out flying, to scoping in more flying. I'm looking for current DCI contracts to be allowed to expire and recapturing anything over 50 seats. Scope must include language for JVs and partnerships of various kinds. Boeing ought to have taught all of us the true value of outsourcing your product - it destroys it. Aligning our brand to include the RJs has, among other things, confused our customers with our carry-on baggage policy so that countless of our mainline customers leave their bags planeside with meds and other need items not to be returned to them until they reach their final (often international) destination. This result alone ought to convince our management to distinguish the mainline product.
Anyway, I'm thinking I'm going Roman for the next contract (notwithstanding Italy's current debt crisis). SPQR!
1. Scope
2. Pay
3. QOL
4. the Rest
Allow me to coin a "new" acronym: SPQR
By Scope, I mean we take seats back. Status quo would be a fail. We have to change our mentality from scoping out flying, to scoping in more flying. I'm looking for current DCI contracts to be allowed to expire and recapturing anything over 50 seats. Scope must include language for JVs and partnerships of various kinds. Boeing ought to have taught all of us the true value of outsourcing your product - it destroys it. Aligning our brand to include the RJs has, among other things, confused our customers with our carry-on baggage policy so that countless of our mainline customers leave their bags planeside with meds and other need items not to be returned to them until they reach their final (often international) destination. This result alone ought to convince our management to distinguish the mainline product.
Anyway, I'm thinking I'm going Roman for the next contract (notwithstanding Italy's current debt crisis). SPQR!
Carl, that's not correct. I specifically stated that LUV and FedEx will be in the contract comparison. I have stated my belief that FDX and UPS are highly profitable companies in a rational duopoly. They are a different industry (overnight package express) whose pilots do the same job we do. LUV is in the same industry with a different business model. They should and will be included as a comparable.
Slow you did say these things, and quite recently but, in the past you have said the things Carl is saying.
Will AF/KLM be included in the comparison?
As to going to birthday parties, look at the track record of those that attend parties vs those that don't. In SWAPA's merger brochure with AAI there are references to a collaborative, company supportive relationship throughout the document. They have the highest pay rate in the passenger industry. Some Delta guys went to a party pre-merger...our pay rates are higher than all of our passenger airline peers except the aforementioned carrier. All those "old-school" tough unions have lower rates of pay. Thoughts?
Don't you see how weak this makes you look? When I get things wrong, I apologize and thank the poster for setting me straight. That's what anyone should do. Not spin and contort because you are so insecure, you can't admit a mistake.
Carl
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