AE to get E175's?
#31
#32
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 3,707
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eaglefly,
the aircraft will say oneworld on the side, A320, B737, B767 operated by British Airways and Iberia flying throughout the USA, OPENSKIES. You new BRAND.
You swing with the fence gate , dependent on where you are, whether AE or AA. But APA has always been short sighted and will be again. The only thing APA just as Alpa can do is call mgt move.
Eaglefly, seems you have inflated your importance again. Were you not an ALPA rep that kept selling out the pilot group here at AE?
Just remember, just like AE, APA does not own any routes in the USA. AA might own slots, but they can be leased out. All route overseas are mostly with openskies agreed countries, no routes owned by AA, routes can be flown by anyone.
AA needs a major overhaul, its intenational flight inflight service lags very far behind most US carriers and definitly way behind foriegn carriers. Domestic, AA is nothing more than an overpriced hamburger, and stale.
the aircraft will say oneworld on the side, A320, B737, B767 operated by British Airways and Iberia flying throughout the USA, OPENSKIES. You new BRAND.
You swing with the fence gate , dependent on where you are, whether AE or AA. But APA has always been short sighted and will be again. The only thing APA just as Alpa can do is call mgt move.
Eaglefly, seems you have inflated your importance again. Were you not an ALPA rep that kept selling out the pilot group here at AE?
Just remember, just like AE, APA does not own any routes in the USA. AA might own slots, but they can be leased out. All route overseas are mostly with openskies agreed countries, no routes owned by AA, routes can be flown by anyone.
AA needs a major overhaul, its intenational flight inflight service lags very far behind most US carriers and definitly way behind foriegn carriers. Domestic, AA is nothing more than an overpriced hamburger, and stale.
#34
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 366
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I really hope American is somehow able to maintain it's current scope. I know that is highly unlikely though, so hopefully they can limit it to the E175.
That being said, I was hoping to make a career out of this. Eagle is not what I had in mind.
As a side note, I readily admit that I may have a reoccurring wet dream of combining the seniority lists. Maybe you should put that at the forefront of your negotiations.
#35
I certainly think that there will be larger Embraer’s in an American paint job, but no current AMR pilot will ever operate them. While we can have a ****ing match between AA and AE, management is done with negotiating. They want to go down the road paved by Delta, United, and Airways. There will be 4 regionals flying for AA and I doubt the future has AE doing any. Eagle will become the next Comair, too much of a burden for its big daddy so it will be snuffed out. These E-jets will be treated like the Delta JFK CRJ-900’s. They will be owned by AA and flow by the cheapest pilot group of the month.
I wish the one list could happen but never will. When management achieves its goal of 50% outsourced flying by multiple partners, they never need to worry about a strike again. These guys learned from the Lorenzo tactics and will magnify the busting technique.
I wish the one list could happen but never will. When management achieves its goal of 50% outsourced flying by multiple partners, they never need to worry about a strike again. These guys learned from the Lorenzo tactics and will magnify the busting technique.
#36
Moderator
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 13,088
Likes: 0
From: B757/767
Hey, put that thing away, I'm not that kind of girl.
And I don't care what flying you think is 'yours'. That only matters in a strike. If you want all of OUR flying (or whoever else will be soon flying OUR routes), then APA shouldn't have let us have it in scope clauses in the first place, and then accept the complications of a "one list" and fight for it back. Good luck with that one!
Otherwise why do I care?
And I don't care what flying you think is 'yours'. That only matters in a strike. If you want all of OUR flying (or whoever else will be soon flying OUR routes), then APA shouldn't have let us have it in scope clauses in the first place, and then accept the complications of a "one list" and fight for it back. Good luck with that one!
Otherwise why do I care?
#37
If Eagle is going away, why let 119 pilots that were on the ATR sit around with pay until April to incur the cost of training to move to other equipment? Granted that could always change since this is the first half of Feb but I would think they would have furloughed immediately (other than the DEC 5th class.) I really expected AMR to try and furlough out of seniority order so they could avoid the big training bubble. IMO they have bigger plans for Eagle. What they are none of us know. Only time will tell.
#38
Banned
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 8,350
Likes: 0
Get a life, dude.
Since this is OBVIOUSLY what you're advocating...........um, get a life, dude.

There's a segment here arguing that AA should hire off the street to avoid having to accept the "undesirables" at Eagle. Congrats...........you just made their argument much stronger.
Last edited by eaglefly; 02-10-2012 at 07:20 AM.
#39
Banned
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 8,350
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I've heard a couple remarks on this and I think the only guys wanting this are the really senior guys who only have a few years left or the really junior guys who get excited about the thought of flying a bigger airplane. Most of the guys talking about it are just yanking your chain and messing around, from my perspective. Anyone wishing to get these aircraft either have ulterior motives or clearly do not see the big picture.
Basically, the blind.........well, actually the greedy, leading the blind.
I really hope American is somehow able to maintain it's current scope. I know that is highly unlikely though, so hopefully they can limit it to the E175.
That being said, I was hoping to make a career out of this. Eagle is not what I had in mind.
As a side note, I readily admit that I may have a reoccurring wet dream of combining the seniority lists. Maybe you should put that at the forefront of your negotiations.
That being said, I was hoping to make a career out of this. Eagle is not what I had in mind.
As a side note, I readily admit that I may have a reoccurring wet dream of combining the seniority lists. Maybe you should put that at the forefront of your negotiations.

I'm still neutral and open to consider both options (if we even get a choice), but I'm starting to lean more towards the latter argument, strictly for future cohesion of the pilot group. We'll see though if that develops any legs.
Last edited by eaglefly; 02-10-2012 at 07:54 AM.
#40
Banned
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 8,350
Likes: 0
I certainly think that there will be larger Embraer’s in an American paint job, but no current AMR pilot will ever operate them. While we can have a ****ing match between AA and AE, management is done with negotiating. They want to go down the road paved by Delta, United, and Airways. There will be 4 regionals flying for AA and I doubt the future has AE doing any. Eagle will become the next Comair, too much of a burden for its big daddy so it will be snuffed out. These E-jets will be treated like the Delta JFK CRJ-900’s. They will be owned by AA and flow by the cheapest pilot group of the month.
I wish the one list could happen but never will. When management achieves its goal of 50% outsourced flying by multiple partners, they never need to worry about a strike again. These guys learned from the Lorenzo tactics and will magnify the busting technique.
I wish the one list could happen but never will. When management achieves its goal of 50% outsourced flying by multiple partners, they never need to worry about a strike again. These guys learned from the Lorenzo tactics and will magnify the busting technique.
That I could see.
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