surreal1221
Well-Known Member
Joliet had a wonderful suggestion. Hopefully he will post it here so that I don't have to steal it from another aviation venue. Come on loverboy.
They were from the bottom of the seniority list. Base and type does not play a factor in this. If they did mostly come from one base or type then that would just be coincidence.Anyone know where these pilots were based or if those furloughed were type specific?
Get over it.
For all the one hit wonders at regionals that are willing to work for nothing
For all the one hit wonders at regionals that are willing to work for nothing because they think they will move on
Wheels and selective quoting FTW, I guess. Pretty sure he's still there because of the number of days off.
Furlough the guys over age 60. They knew the rules before they were hired, during the 30-40 years they spent at American. It was their career expectation to retire at 60, why should they get 5 more years at a junior pilot's expense?
The individual pilot groups should have an LOA furloughing all pilots over 60 before the most junior pilot.
300+ Geezers @ AMR are in fact stealing from the most junior pilots per what was expected throughout their entire careers. Isn't that what all seniority lists are about these days? It keeps coming down to career expectations.
This is the only way the Age 65 rule could be even remotely considered fair to airline pilots as a whole.
:bandit:
Furlough the guys over age 60. They knew the rules before they were hired, during the 30-40 years they spent at American. It was their career expectation to retire at 60, why should they get 5 more years at a junior pilot's expense?
The individual pilot groups should have an LOA furloughing all pilots over 60 before the most junior pilot.
300+ Geezers @ AMR are in fact stealing from the most junior pilots per what was expected throughout their entire careers. Isn't that what all seniority lists are about these days? It keeps coming down to career expectations.
This is the only way the Age 65 rule could be even remotely considered fair to airline pilots as a whole.
:bandit:
Who gives a rats ass about expectation?
Who gives a rats ass about expectation? Seniority is everything; and that's "the rules" you talk about, like it or not. The junior guys knew "the rules" when they came onboard about how seniority works, and when it doesn't work in their favor, they now want someone else to blame. Age 65 is passed and the senior guys are allowed to take part in it. Why? Because:
1. There are no guarantees.
2. Life isn't fair.
3. Timing is everything
4. Seniority has its privileges
That's just how it is, like it or not. Of course, those with the seniority not privy to these perks will obviously feel like they're being "stolen from".
Stolen from.........you've got to be kidding me. You think there should be an LOA over who gets furloughed, propose it for a vote.
:yeahthat:
Holy camoly what a bunch of back stabbers in the airline world.
:yeahthat:
Holy camoly what a bunch of back stabbers in the airline world.
Stabby stab stab in the back. You are right, all the Geezers riding the Geezermeter stabbed every junior pilot in the face with Uncle Sam's hand.
You mean like fact that most of the over 60 guys are on the A-Scale. The ones that voted in the screw your buddy scale. The ones with a guaranteed A- fund.
Not everybody who is over 60 works for AA...
I would much rather see the guys who are nearing retirement and who have lost their retirement gain an extra five years than a much younger pilot who has many more years left in their career. They have lost a lot more than us.
You don't get it. The AA pilots that are over 60 are the ones I am talking about. They have a guaranteed A- fund, and a better pay scale.
1. There are no guarantees.
3. Timing is everything.