SpiceWeasel
Tre Kronor
This is an all-encompassing post, so here it goes... and flame away, it's cool.
I am curious as to why we need unions for things OTHER than the grievance process / pilot representing.
Why? Because I have been given the impression by folks in union positions that the money to make the contracts better does not exist. Whatever is in your contract right now is the maximum pot of gold you can draw from. It never gets bigger, it can only get smaller, and if you want gains, you don't increase the pot, you negotiate them away from other sections. This seems to hold true at regionals and majors.
For example, Endeavor was bankrupted partially by our extravagant JCBA. @Seggy has stated there is not really money to pay what we are asking, so it stands to reason that our demands in the JCBA were untenable.
Delta Air Lines Contract 2012... it's great? Well, according to the company, it's cost neutral. So, again, a union didn't really do much but move the divisions in the pie to different sections of the contract, the pot was not increased.
Why is this? @ATN_Pilot , you have said that labor is not a huge cost factor at companies. You may have specifically meant pilots, but if you pull up Delta's 10K, it looks as if 23% of their expenses for 2013 were labor. The increase year over year was 700 million. But clearly, since Delta's contract was cost neutral, it didn't go toward the pilots per se.
So - what's the point of a union, other than "protections"? I get those, but it seems like negotiations is a fruitless exercise, since, with, or without unions, the pot of money to pay the people stays the same.
If I am wrong (and please, I hope I am): is it at all possible to GROW this pot of available money so that a contract negotiation doesn't center around "what are you willing to give up", but rather "where are you willing to improve the numbers"?
@BobDDuck ?
@amorris311 ?
I am curious as to why we need unions for things OTHER than the grievance process / pilot representing.
Why? Because I have been given the impression by folks in union positions that the money to make the contracts better does not exist. Whatever is in your contract right now is the maximum pot of gold you can draw from. It never gets bigger, it can only get smaller, and if you want gains, you don't increase the pot, you negotiate them away from other sections. This seems to hold true at regionals and majors.
For example, Endeavor was bankrupted partially by our extravagant JCBA. @Seggy has stated there is not really money to pay what we are asking, so it stands to reason that our demands in the JCBA were untenable.
Delta Air Lines Contract 2012... it's great? Well, according to the company, it's cost neutral. So, again, a union didn't really do much but move the divisions in the pie to different sections of the contract, the pot was not increased.
Why is this? @ATN_Pilot , you have said that labor is not a huge cost factor at companies. You may have specifically meant pilots, but if you pull up Delta's 10K, it looks as if 23% of their expenses for 2013 were labor. The increase year over year was 700 million. But clearly, since Delta's contract was cost neutral, it didn't go toward the pilots per se.
So - what's the point of a union, other than "protections"? I get those, but it seems like negotiations is a fruitless exercise, since, with, or without unions, the pot of money to pay the people stays the same.
If I am wrong (and please, I hope I am): is it at all possible to GROW this pot of available money so that a contract negotiation doesn't center around "what are you willing to give up", but rather "where are you willing to improve the numbers"?
@BobDDuck ?
@amorris311 ?