Fedex Pilots proposed retirement plan
#241
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Joined APC: Mar 2012
Position: Two Wheeler FrontSeat
Posts: 1,162
The guys who have 25 years of service and their high five have absolutely nothing to lose in their scenario of freezing the current A plan. They can only go up with adding another defined benefit plan to the current A plan. Guys who stand a lot to lose are those who were hired at a later stage in life and will never get 25 years of service or perhaps even a high five of $260. Pilots who are out on LTD could also be adversely affected in a similar fashion.
This effort is being led by pilots with nothing to lose and desperately trying to get some kind of bump in their retirement benefits before they hit 65. That would be ok if they also get real improvements for everybody else, but I'm not convinced that will happen.
Even if the company were shown these plans and they were able to save money and increase our benefits I'm not convinced they would do it. Either out of spite or for company morale. How could they justify increasing our defined benefit plans after freezing everybody else's just a few years ago? I think the fallout from such a maneuver is why the company refused to consider it in the last contract negotiation.
I'm also not sure this pilot group (57% of whom voted for the current contract) will have the fortitude to vote something new down that really doesn't increase every pilot's benefits. A lot of pilots are prejudiced against A plans because they or somebody they know lost theirs due to bankruptcy and that is a valid concern. They hear A plan and instinctively think it will never be there for them and will take any B plan bump to cast away the A plan.
We all know that its not possible to replace that $130K per year with B fund bumps under current IRS limits. I'll take the small risk of FedEx going bankrupt in the next 20-30 years over taking on all of the investment risk myself over that same time frame. I've got the B plan and my personal savings to put in the market to augment the A plan and that is enough personal risk for me.
This effort is being led by pilots with nothing to lose and desperately trying to get some kind of bump in their retirement benefits before they hit 65. That would be ok if they also get real improvements for everybody else, but I'm not convinced that will happen.
Even if the company were shown these plans and they were able to save money and increase our benefits I'm not convinced they would do it. Either out of spite or for company morale. How could they justify increasing our defined benefit plans after freezing everybody else's just a few years ago? I think the fallout from such a maneuver is why the company refused to consider it in the last contract negotiation.
I'm also not sure this pilot group (57% of whom voted for the current contract) will have the fortitude to vote something new down that really doesn't increase every pilot's benefits. A lot of pilots are prejudiced against A plans because they or somebody they know lost theirs due to bankruptcy and that is a valid concern. They hear A plan and instinctively think it will never be there for them and will take any B plan bump to cast away the A plan.
We all know that its not possible to replace that $130K per year with B fund bumps under current IRS limits. I'll take the small risk of FedEx going bankrupt in the next 20-30 years over taking on all of the investment risk myself over that same time frame. I've got the B plan and my personal savings to put in the market to augment the A plan and that is enough personal risk for me.
This may have been you best post on here, I knew you had it in you.
#242
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Nov 2013
Posts: 2,756
Hub turn message was the union plans to get more info out in 2-3 weeks
They are looking at two new plans to "replace" the current A fund.
A "variable accrual" plan or a "variable benefit" plan.
No talk of increasing B fund (like UPS) and keeping current A fund
No talk of making A fund changes similar to what UPS did in their last negotiation
It's clear the union leadership has put in a lot of monetary and emotional capital into researching these new options and the train is about to leave the station
Some are asking why other options to increase overall retirement, without changing to a whole new A fund construct, aren't being discussed, surveyed or offered...???
How limited/focused will the pilot survey be?
Will it lead pilots to a choice between options 1 and 2 --- while in reality options 3, 4 and 5 may also exist?
They are looking at two new plans to "replace" the current A fund.
A "variable accrual" plan or a "variable benefit" plan.
No talk of increasing B fund (like UPS) and keeping current A fund
No talk of making A fund changes similar to what UPS did in their last negotiation
It's clear the union leadership has put in a lot of monetary and emotional capital into researching these new options and the train is about to leave the station
Some are asking why other options to increase overall retirement, without changing to a whole new A fund construct, aren't being discussed, surveyed or offered...???
How limited/focused will the pilot survey be?
Will it lead pilots to a choice between options 1 and 2 --- while in reality options 3, 4 and 5 may also exist?
#243
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Nov 2013
Posts: 2,756
What did you really get out of that contract? Most of the people who vote for it did so because they were either tired of waiting, or accepted the "that the best we will get" coolaid. They didn't vote for it because it was a good contract, so keep fooling yourself. A good contract don't get voted in by such a small margin.
#245
#247
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Mar 2012
Position: Two Wheeler FrontSeat
Posts: 1,162
#249
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,820
#250
Here we go... leg's of its own now! The road to hell is paved with good intentions...! Unanimous?? WOW!
Am I overreacting in my head about this, because I'm not seeing any reaction on the board here...?
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