April 14, 2012
Dear United Pilots:
Many of you have heard or used the term “release” while our Railway Labor Act (RLA) Section 6 negotiations have been in mediation for quite some time. I would like to explain this term and how it may factor into our future. Perhaps the most important item to understand is what release is not; it is not a release from the status quo or our obligations under the injunction. Neither the company nor employees are free to engage in self-help when first “released.”
While negotiating under the Railway Labor Act (RLA), either party may request to be released from mediated negotiations. If the National Mediation Board (NMB) agrees, it will proffer arbitration and if, after 10 days both parties do not agree, then an impasse would be declared and a 30-day “cooling off” period would begin.
The term “cooling off” is a misnomer; your union, the NMB and certainly management would all be extremely busy during this 30-day countdown. The parties should then be committed to negotiating the JCBA if they are truly serious about its completion – more so than hitherto. This would be the beginning of the end-game to bargain under the RLA. While the RLA was written to protect the flow of commerce, the risk of interruption of that flow is finally a legal point of leverage.
ALPA National, and by extension our MEC, has a vast array of tools at their disposal to assist local Councils and our pilots. Technology is helpful, but the determining factor in any release scenario is the dedication of the individual pilot and his/her desire for a successful outcome.
There is a generic strike handbook published by ALPA. I tasked our SPSC to work with our counterparts at CAL SPSC to create and publish a “Joint United and Continental Strike Preparedness Manual 2012.” This will be our reference manual for training and job assignments. It is very explicit, technical and accurate. It is ready.
I, the MEC, and its Officers will determine if and when we ask to be released. That is our responsibility and we don’t take it lightly. The decision will be influenced by the pace, participation and desire of the parties currently engaged in our negotiations to reach an agreement. If a release is called for, I ask you to stand firm with your brother and sister pilots and their families. It is no longer their family or your family – it is our family. The other airlines and their families in this industry are counting on us to succeed, to make this again a profession of which we can be proud. Together, we cannot fail. Our future depends on it; our children’s future depends on it.
It bears repeating that United has obtained a preliminary injunction against ALPA and the United pilots, barring the United pilots and ALPA from interfering with United’s operation prior to the end of the 30-day cooling-off period. Self-help prior to this time can lead to discipline and fines for contempt directed against individuals, fines directed against our union, interference with our ability to engage in self-help at the appropriate time and other negative restrictions on us that would otherwise not exist and that would seriously damage our bargaining leverage. We cannot let our frustrations provide management a tool that can only harm our interests and prevent us from exercising our legal rights under the RLA.
We value our customers and are proud of what we deliver. I know I speak for all pilots when I say that. As your leader I want you to know that the needs of our customers are also a top priority and no matter what transpires in the coming weeks, we owe it to our customers to provide them with information and clear guidance so that their travel plans are not disrupted.
Talk is cheap, but mergers are expensive. Problems need to be solved and sometimes the solutions cost money. That money should not come from the pockets of the pilots.
We are United,
Captain Jay Heppner
Chairman, United Master Executive Council