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AirTran management picks up Spirit scraps
From the AAI message board blast email / message to airtran pilots:
Tonight several members of the MEC were informed by line pilots that Flt. 1941 was added to todays flight schedule. The flight had several former Spirit ticket holders. Thanks for keeping your eyes and ears open and informing your MEC immediately. Within 20 minutes of the first phone call your MEC accomplished the following. 1. Had ALPA attorneys contact senior AirTran management to confirm the nature of the new flight segment and any financial connection to Spirit. 2. Contacted the Spirit MEC to confirm flight 1941 did not meet any definition of struck work, and obtained approval from the Spirit MEC that the flight segment would not be seen as struck work. 3. Instructed line pilots the flight was O.K. to fly. It was quickly determined that the extra section of flying was added as some Spirit passengers received refunds from Spirit for cancelled flights. In addition, some passengers reported receiving $100 extra from Spirit as an accommodation for their trouble. Those passengers then bought tickets on AirTran. Spirit did not received any revenue from flight 1941. And so it begins. Looks as if AirTran management plans to steal some customer loyalty and make some money in the process. I hope this is a wakeup call for Spirit management. Act fast, or other airlines will. |
So, for us ignorant folks.....
Understanding that the MECs have approved this, why is this not "struck work"? |
Originally Posted by FlyJSH
(Post 826757)
So, for us ignorant folks.....
Understanding that the MECs have approved this, why is this not "struck work"? |
From my understanding, it's a way for the Spirit MEC to put pressure on management.
By allowing other airlines to pick up the routes, Spirit risks losing MORE business the more they delay giving the pilots a contract and getting back to work. Bringin' the heat. Nice job Spirit MEC. |
Originally Posted by SteelHorseFlyer
(Post 826763)
From my understanding, it's a way for the Spirit MEC to put pressure on management.
By allowing other airlines to pick up the routes, Spirit risks losing MORE business the more they delay giving the pilots a contract and getting back to work. Bringin' the heat. Nice job Spirit MEC. As Spirit Airlines strike drags on, pilots negotiate and passengers wait June 14, 2010|By Sara K. Clarke, Orlando Sentinel Spirit Airlines canceled more flights this week because of a pilots' strike, though the two sides have been called back to the bargaining table as stranded passengers continued scrambling to find alternative routes home. At Orlando International Airport, a steady stream of travelers lined up at the Spirit check-in counter Monday, though few reported getting much help. Other passengers, aware of the problem ahead of time, said they had rebooked themselves on other airlines at their own expense. "We figured over the weekend nothing would get resolved," said Diane Desrosiers, who heard about the strike from another passenger on the flight into Orlando on Friday and booked return tickets on JetBlue Airways for $149 each. "We knew ahead of time. We were proactive." Spirit's pilots said Monday afternoon they had been called back to the negotiating table by the National Mediation Board, offering stranded passengers a glimmer of hope. Orlando-based AirTran Airways, another low-cost carrier that said it has an agreement with Spirit to offer assistance whenever possible, added a last-minute flight from Orlando to San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Monday. That flight quickly filled up, with some passengers paying as much at $444 for a one-way ticket. AirTran said it was considering adding another San Juan flight today. A spokesman said the airline's flights used a tiered-pricing system that raise the price as demand rises and seats become scarce. Rosa Hernandez and her husband, Jose Santana, paid $2,888 Monday for six one-way tickets on AirTran. The couple had driven up from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Spirit's home base, in hopes of finding a way home to Puerto Rico. Their original fare on Spirit: $134 a person. "We're going first class [on AirTran] because they're all sold out," Hernandez said in Spanish. Spirit's planes have been grounded since early Saturday, when the airline's pilots walked out after failed contract negotiations. Despite initial vows to keep flying, the discount carrier has been forced to cancel flights at least through Wednesday. Spirit carries about 16,000 passengers on an average day. Of those, about 1,100 fly out of OIA, where Spirit accounts for only about 2 percent of all passenger traffic |
Originally Posted by SteelHorseFlyer
(Post 826763)
From my understanding, it's a way for the Spirit MEC to put pressure on management.
By allowing other airlines to pick up the routes, Spirit risks losing MORE business the more they delay giving the pilots a contract and getting back to work. Bringin' the heat. Nice job Spirit MEC. YouTube - Spirit Pilots' Strike Forces More Cancellations Got a kick out of the lady at that end; "For me, it's unfair for me, you know the passenger because I no agree wit the amount they ax them. Because now the economy is in bad sape" I get special little warm feeling in my heart with that little gem of an excuse. Just goes hand in hand with the ongoing undeserved sense of self-entitlement that passengers get when paying $9 for a seat. |
Originally Posted by Maddoggin
(Post 826767)
Orlando-based AirTran Airways, another low-cost carrier that said it has an agreement with Spirit to offer assistance whenever possible, added a last-minute flight from Orlando to San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Monday. That flight quickly filled up, with some passengers paying as much at $444 for a one-way ticket.
The nature of the agreement means that this wouldn't be struck work since Spirit has no financial gain during the process. Air Tran would be the whole beneficiary. |
If the strike is prolonged (IE into the next revenue planning cycle), expect to see other carriers increase their capacity along the routes overlap the segments that Spirit served. The other airlines will do all they can to gain Spirit's market share.
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Originally Posted by FlyJSH
(Post 826757)
So, for us ignorant folks.....
Understanding that the MECs have approved this, why is this not "struck work"? Good job noticing the added flight in the first place and making sure it's right! |
Originally Posted by FlyerJosh
(Post 826781)
I'm guessing that Spirit, like many other carriers has some sort of inter-airline agreement to carry passengers that are displaced due to mechanical failure, overbooking, etc. Airline A (Spirit) cancels the flight and redirects reservations to Airline B (Air Tran). Airline A ends up losing the revenue (or at least part of it) and pays airline B to carry their passengers.
The nature of the agreement means that this wouldn't be struck work since Spirit has no financial gain during the process. Air Tran would be the whole beneficiary. 7.2. Rebooking When a customer holding a confirmed reservation on a flight will be delayed because of a schedule Spirit will not reimburse customers for flights that they take on other carriers.irregularity (including but not limited to, a missed connection, flight cancellation, omission of a scheduled stop, substitution of equipment, a different class of service or schedule change), Spirit will rebook the customer on Spirit's first available flight on which seats are available to the customer's destination without additional charge. I dont think they are offering any sort of help to their passengers. |
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