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Uniform delayed...... THANKFULLY!
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Thank goodness!
And hopefully a line pilot will be part of the up/down on the next version long before it goes to a wear test. Lee |
Originally Posted by LeeFXDWG
(Post 2814719)
Thank goodness!
And hopefully a line pilot will be part of the up/down on the next version long before it goes to a wear test. Lee |
Originally Posted by PDRit
(Post 2814740)
Wasn’t our ALPA uniform rep deeply involved in the design. There was that fancy video of him being fitted and wearing the uniform. On second thought you said a “line pilot” and that most likely excludes the uniform committee. Rumor was he wanted up to 6 different ties available...for a suit called “uniform”. Brilliant.
That’s all that is needed IMO. Give both the company and union feedback. Make it constructive. Worked this time at least. Lee |
Originally Posted by PDRit
(Post 2814740)
Wasn’t our ALPA uniform rep deeply involved in the design. There was that fancy video of him being fitted and wearing the uniform. On second thought you said a “line pilot” and that most likely excludes the uniform committee. Rumor was he wanted up to 6 different ties available...for a suit called “uniform”. Brilliant.
Sometimes it may be in ALPA's best interest to pull back from certain things. This may be one of them. We have uniform committee reps involved in the process. Why exactly? To me this is like having ALPA reps being forced to come up with concessions for a concessionary contract. ALPA might be wise to turn away from some specific opportunities to collaborate with the company. I do like collaboration when and where it counts....FOQA, ASAP, and Safety come to mind. Great upside to the pilots and the profession. I don't see much upside for ALPA or the committee volunteers on this one. They'll have egg on their face no matter what the outcome. Professional, conservative, and easy to wear. Those should be the three over-riding principles. The company is pushing purple, and color pallets derived from social and demographic studies on calming and pleasing shades and hues of colors that professional pilots wouldn't wear to the Queens Jubilee, wedding, funeral, business luncheon, speaking engagement, or on a 8 day international W pairing. Perhaps ALPA should walk away from the process. Our interest aren't co-aligned and are therefore unequally yoked. Union participation in any company led process should provide unity to and on behalf of our pilots. It shouldn't divide the pilots, but bring them together. Since this is not the case, the union should not participate in this exercise in futility, nor should we spend ALPA resources on it (human or tangible). |
Originally Posted by baseball
(Post 2815270)
Sometimes it may be in ALPA's best interest to pull back from certain things. This may be one of them.
We have uniform committee reps involved in the process. Why exactly? To me this is like having ALPA reps being forced to come up with concessions for a concessionary contract. ALPA might be wise to turn away from some specific opportunities to collaborate with the company. I do like collaboration when and where it counts....FOQA, ASAP, and Safety come to mind. Great upside to the pilots and the profession. I don't see much upside for ALPA or the committee volunteers on this one. They'll have egg on their face no matter what the outcome. Professional, conservative, and easy to wear. Those should be the three over-riding principles. The company is pushing purple, and color pallets derived from social and demographic studies on calming and pleasing shades and hues of colors that professional pilots wouldn't wear to the Queens Jubilee, wedding, funeral, business luncheon, speaking engagement, or on a 8 day international W pairing. Perhaps ALPA should walk away from the process. Our interest aren't co-aligned and are therefore unequally yoked. Union participation in any company led process should provide unity to and on behalf of our pilots. It shouldn't divide the pilots, but bring them together. Since this is not the case, the union should not participate in this exercise in futility, nor should we spend ALPA resources on it (human or tangible). |
Pilots at home wearing white new balance sneakers and jorts asking to be included in the process. As pilots we do a lot of things well. Fashion sense just isn't one of them. Just keep it classy and easy to maintain.
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Originally Posted by Aquaticus
(Post 2815284)
Pilots at home wearing white new balance sneakers and jorts asking to be included in the process. As pilots we do a lot of things well. Fashion sense just isn't one of them. Just keep it classy and easy to maintain.
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Originally Posted by baseball
(Post 2815270)
Sometimes it may be in ALPA's best interest to pull back from certain things. This may be one of them.
We have uniform committee reps involved in the process. Why exactly? To me this is like having ALPA reps being forced to come up with concessions for a concessionary contract. ALPA might be wise to turn away from some specific opportunities to collaborate with the company. I do like collaboration when and where it counts....FOQA, ASAP, and Safety come to mind. Great upside to the pilots and the profession. I don't see much upside for ALPA or the committee volunteers on this one. They'll have egg on their face no matter what the outcome. Professional, conservative, and easy to wear. Those should be the three over-riding principles. The company is pushing purple, and color pallets derived from social and demographic studies on calming and pleasing shades and hues of colors that professional pilots wouldn't wear to the Queens Jubilee, wedding, funeral, business luncheon, speaking engagement, or on a 8 day international W pairing. Perhaps ALPA should walk away from the process. Our interest aren't co-aligned and are therefore unequally yoked. Union participation in any company led process should provide unity to and on behalf of our pilots. It shouldn't divide the pilots, but bring them together. Since this is not the case, the union should not participate in this exercise in futility, nor should we spend ALPA resources on it (human or tangible). |
Passengers don't want purple or hues or fancy fashion from pilots. They want to see a pilots uniform be white New Balance sneakers, tall white socks and a t-shirt tucked into jorts with a belt. That's the only look you need to instill confidence with our passengers.
Originally Posted by Aquaticus
(Post 2815284)
Pilots at home wearing white new balance sneakers and jorts asking to be included in the process.
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