Aviator1988
Well-Known Member
Beatings will continue until morale improves......
Trip7, the problem is that unions are always in a horrible position in these situations because of the way that the bankruptcy code is currently structured. Judges don't engage in negotiations, so if they decide to grant an 1113(c) motion, then it basically means that the company can just impose its term sheet. The judge isn't going to pick and choose items here and there from both sides proposals. He's just going to decide if the company needs concessions to restructure and protect the creditors. If he thinks they do, then he grants the motion, and AMR imposes. Negotiations will certainly happen between the union and the company, because the law requires it, but the outcome of those negotiations is usually something pretty damned bad. Yes, the most glaring examples will probably disappear (no min guarantee, for example), but I would be surprised if they don't get their scope concessions and pay banding in the end. And that's bad news. Especially the scope.
Well, that takes care of the so called "pilot shortage" if that's all true. No place to move on from the regionals if the regionals get all the domestic flying....
Well, that takes care of the so called "pilot shortage" if that's all true. No place to move on from the regionals if the regionals get all the domestic flying....
It all depends on how much of the A-fund they get. Talking to a 737 CA, he said if they don't get anything out of the A-fund then any CA over 60 can't make the money back up. For some guys on the 73 and 80 it is even worse and it sounds like anyone over 55 doesn't have the time left to make up the money.Am I right that the over 60's at AA who stuck around, will have ended up paying money to work the past 4 years? Or am I missing something?
Depends on how much of an international expansion these carriers are planning. AMR and UNICAl both have the "game-changer" on order but that may be just replacements for those aging 767s.
I don't blame the legacy airlines for putting domestic ops in the backseat and focusing on intl. in an industry that struggles for profit as much as this one, focusing on the most profitable types of flying maybe a smart move. Especially with Emirates, Qatar, Ethiad and the like expanding at a FURIOUS pace. Emirates and Qatar 777 upgrade time (4 yrs) is shorter than ASA CRJ200 upgrade......
YEAH!!! Aeroflot! I'm in!I'm totally cool with that as long as I can get my 1,000 TPIC and move on the ultra super premium mainline flying at Aeroflot.
I read somwhere (NY Times I believe) that AMR's labor costs are somewhere around 30% higher than their competitors. Not that this thing is going to be pretty but from a sheer competitive stand point, how does anyone expect them to be able to compete with the likes of DL with such a cost structure?
I read somwhere (NY Times I believe) that AMR's labor costs are somewhere around 30% higher than their competitors. Not that this thing is going to be pretty but from a sheer competitive stand point, how does anyone expect them to be able to compete with the likes of DL with such a cost structure?
Because labor is nowhere near 30% of their costs, so 30% high is like 3% greater total costs, and the loss of money is a lot more than 3%.
They could eliminate labor entirely and be donated a group of robots at no cost that work for free on solar power and then the might be competitive.
That's exaggerated a bit, but even if they cut the labor cost back by the 30%, they've still got money issues. Might as well cut back labor as little as possible so you can still have a somewhat productive workforce in a business where customer service matters.
I don't. I've said for a long time that they're going to have to cut costs. The problem is that they're going too far, of course. Instead of the reasonable things, like freezing the pension and going to a B-Fund, they're going all out with craziness like hundreds of 88-seat RJs outsourced and punishing you for being sick. They need to cut costs, but not like that.
FTFY...I don't. I've said for a long time that they're going to have to cut costs. The problem is that they're going too far, of course. Instead of the reasonable things, like freezing the pension and going to a B-Fund, they're going all out with craziness like hundreds of 88-seat RJs outsourced and punishing you for being sick. They need to cut costs, but not go to excessive lengths to piss the labor groups off (more).