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Originally Posted by BenTover
(Post 2950327)
Exactly. Nothing spells QOL like 110-120 credit hours in a vacation month and 95 for others.
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Originally Posted by crewdawg
(Post 2950354)
At DAL, it depends on the staffing in your category. When I bid a line, I drop my entire schedule to zero, then pick up more efficient trips. For me that means 84 to 95 hours on 12 days of actual work. Over 110 in vacations months isn't hard at all.
With a little seniority, thanks to OE trip buys and picking up (or greenslipping) over those days, I have buddies averaging 110-120 month even in non-vacation months. Recently flew with a A330 captain that had a 12 month rolling average of 164 hours/month (highest month was ~250...I actually saw his PAS that proved it). Dude is 70% in his seat, but he's hustling trying to pad his account before retirement. Point is every contract has it's niceties. |
Originally Posted by Hatesheavys
(Post 2950415)
It’s nice to have the choice to do that, especially with our vacation bids where the top 30% take every good week in the first round or two, and your left with two weeks you wanted and three that are worthless!
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UAL or Delta
Originally Posted by BenTover
(Post 2950327)
Exactly. Nothing spells QOL like 110-120 credit hours in a vacation month and 95 for others.
FWIW at UAL, my last year on the 777 I averaged 103hrs if credit a month and worked an average of 11.6 days a month. |
Originally Posted by Itsajob
(Post 2950441)
What’s the value of seniority without bidding power? The top dog should get first pick building a line, picking up premium pay, equipment, seat, and vacation. If the senior pilots want to bid 6 weeks in a row in the middle of summer, or take all of the good stuff in the first round, they’ve done the time to earn that privilege. After one builds seniority in the right seat of a NB, everything from then on is a choice. They can hold onto super seniority in their seat, or they can sacrifice some of that bidding power to change equipment or seats. The senior should be able to bid vacation how they please and also sleep easy knowing that they never have to work another holiday or family day since they can simply monthly bid to avoid those days. They had to wait to be senior enough to get the good stuff, and it isn’t unfair to expect others to play the same game.
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Originally Posted by rightside02
(Post 2949968)
Get rid of the crew meals and put that dollar in my paycheck ...
Crew meals are a joke .. (can’t speaking for the heavy guys ) Most of our meals are first class meals or similar.. What more do you want? The snacks are indeed weak. |
Originally Posted by Itsajob
(Post 2950441)
What’s the value of seniority without bidding power? The top dog should get first pick building a line, picking up premium pay, equipment, seat, and vacation. If the senior pilots want to bid 6 weeks in a row in the middle of summer, or take all of the good stuff in the first round, they’ve done the time to earn that privilege. After one builds seniority in the right seat of a NB, everything from then on is a choice. They can hold onto super seniority in their seat, or they can sacrifice some of that bidding power to change equipment or seats. The senior should be able to bid vacation how they please and also sleep easy knowing that they never have to work another holiday or family day since they can simply monthly bid to avoid those days. They had to wait to be senior enough to get the good stuff, and it isn’t unfair to expect others to play the same game.
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Originally Posted by aileronjam
(Post 2950548)
Not everyone has put in the time that equates to their seniority.
Anyway, this doesn’t have much to do with picking United or Delta. Both are great places to be, however they are only as good as their current contract and management team. If I had an offer from both I’d go with the one with a big base that I’d want to live in or that I could easily commute to. Both companies are great places to be and should be around for a long time. Decide where you want to live and enjoy a great ride. |
Originally Posted by Hatesheavys
(Post 2950415)
It’s nice to have the choice to do that, especially with our vacation bids where the top 30% take every good week in the first round or two, and your left with two weeks you wanted and three that are worthless!
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Originally Posted by APC225
(Post 2950655)
What’s the point when bidding closes in late Spring, too late to commit to vacation plans. Latest blastmail dispelled the “myth” (their word): it’s easier for the company to do it this way.
Our current vacation calendar year is probably one of the dumbest things we have in our contract. Doing the bidding in September for a Jan 1st - Dec 31 makes a hell of a lot more sense. |
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