I don't know if you are trying to be cute or funny but I'll give you an example. A few years ago right after the CJC crash we got several phone calls from people involved with SAPA, the SkyWest "bargaining agent", regarding potential use of FOQA data for disciplinary issues. Several people at CJC, who are also members on this board, helped them dig through the advisory circular and alert the FAA of this potential data violation. These are the things you try and avoid. The same goes for the ASAP program. If you don't have complete trust from the pilot group your ASAP program is garbage. Most management teams worth their salt understand this and don't take lightly to people abusing the information.So you dont need a union? Was going to ask about SKW.
In order to comply with the FAA guidance in the MOU you need a collective bargaining representative to serve as the gatekeeper of information. If you don't have that, the company can go after the pilots which defeats the purpose of these programs.
Even @PhilosopherPilot who I vehemently disagree with on about everything, agrees, a certified union ONLY fills that role.
Per the MOU, FAA Guidance and best practices it should be a union.
Companies have ASAP and FOQA programs that aren't unionized but the FAA hates that.
So you dont need a union? Was going to ask about SKW.
They are not exclusive to union shops. Pro-union die hards like Seggy and ATN Pilot would like you to believe otherwise.I'm not really familiar with airline ASAP or FOQA MOU. Anybody mind explaining for me why they are exclusive to a union shop?
In order to comply with the FAA guidance in the MOU you need a collective bargaining representative to serve as the gatekeeper of information. If you don't have that, the company can go after the pilots which defeats the purpose of these programs.
Even @PhilosopherPilot who I vehemently disagree with on about everything, agrees, a certified union ONLY fills that role.
FYI. I was serious because my first thought was the XJT to SKW to this issue. That and Seggy first saying it was to be and then the FAA wouldn't like it if not union. Thanks for the info. I might be talking to a non union group shortly. 8(amorris311 said:I don't know if you are trying to be cute or funny but I'll give you an example. A few years ago right after the CJC crash we got several phone calls from people involved with SAPA, the SkyWest "bargaining agent", regarding potential use of FOQA data for disciplinary issues. Several people at CJC, who are also members on this board, helped them dig through the advisory circular and alert the FAA of this potential data violation. These are the things you try and avoid. The same goes for the ASAP program. If you don't have complete trust from the pilot group your ASAP program is garbage. Most management teams worth their salt understand this and don't take lightly to people abusing the information.
Your company history is but a nano second in the history of aviation. Wait til you guys bent serious metal and kill people. Then see how managamous management is.
Wow, stay classy.
I think Cptnchia is just being realistic.
Eventually, some event is going to happen at every carrier. It's just a matter of statistical probability. Hopefully it never happens but eventually things do, be it an overrun, landing at the wrong airport, evacuation gone wrong, the list goes on.
If you'd like another dissenting opinion to ignore, I'm the safety chairman of my airline's union and I just have to laugh at the simplicity of some of your responses on this topic.
Until an airline has an event that truly tests the program, you have no idea how it is going to work. History is not at all on the side that you've chosen to defend, though.
You still missed the point @Nick made.I use incidents and accidents as evidence. ASAP will protect a pilot but only to a certain limit. Willful negligence that ends up hurting people will get a pilot fired regardless of union or not. Look at SWA's hard landing gear collapse at LGA. The FO was retrained and that was that, but the CA was outright fired. Not even SWAPA will get her job back. In fact, it seems SWAPA is fine with the firing.
If one seriously bends metal and/or kill people, a FOQA/ASAP would be the last thing on mind. I also don't know what 'managamous' is. It's not in the dictionary.
You still missed the point @Nick made.
Your example of the SWA flight into LGA shows how little you actually know about what happened during the investigation. I on the other hand know someone personally involved (think representation) on the SWAPA side and there was a laundry list of things that went into the decision to keep and let go the pilots.
@Seggy is referring to the countless seminars and meetings we both attended throughout the years with SME's from the FAA regarding safety reporting. Most carriers are transitioning to the AQP training platform. This style of training works exceptionally well when there is good realistic data to start from. The FAA has a concern that unless you have good gatekeepers of the information there will be a break down in trust amongst the pilot groups and as a result AQP training as well as FAA advisories in the future will go downhill, and fast! The FAA on several occasions has liked the idea of having a defined person or group of people (gatekeepers) to be in charge of this information. Since most carriers are unionized they default to having language regarding bargaining agents.FYI. I was serious because my first thought was the XJT to SKW to this issue. That and Seggy first saying it was to be and then the FAA wouldn't like it if not union. Thanks for the info. I might be talking to a non union group shortly. 8(
I'm not talking about the final report. I'm talking about how one issue, inside of a bigger issue, was handled. Stop trying to imply that I'm telling you something that needs to stay confidential. I gave you no specifics and it isn't even worth arguing. Just pointing out that a lot more went Into the decision then you lead on.There is no final report on that incident. I would like to see it when it comes out. "What happened during the investigation." Chief, there is no report out yet. Are you implying someone inside SWAPA who is supposed to protect confidential information regarding an accident just happened to call you and share this information regarding the LGA Captain?
Other airlines want specific numbers protected, such as the cost of individual items like health care or sick time. It just depends.
Que @Seggy to give a certain ALPA property grief over crew meals.The biggest thing the company didn't want us talking about last time around was the cost of crew meals.
I'm not talking about the final report. I'm talking about how one issue, inside of a bigger issue, was handled. Stop trying to imply that I'm telling you something that needs to stay confidential. I gave you no specifics and it isn't even worth arguing. Just pointing out that a lot more went Into the decision then you lead on.
@Cptnchia has been on both sides of the table. You might want to sit back and absorb some of his knowledge. Hell if I worked for his carrier I would push to have him sitting in negotiations. That's just me.
I get you hate unions and you think they are nothing but trash. Be thankful you have never had to use one to fullest extent. I'm sure though, over the course of your long career, you are going to have to call on someone. It is comforting to know there are union brothers and sisters out there willing to help. Maybe VA has a great open door policy but I'm willing to bet they won't go to bat to the same level as a union.
Wow, stay humble, or keep your head in the sand and ignore years of hard learning and people who actually may know more than you.Wow, stay classy.
Ya think that maybe her enormous disciplinary file and multiple pro Stan interventions might have added weight to her termination? Or are we just selectively parsing arguments?I. Look at SWA's hard landing gear collapse at LGA. The FO was retrained and that was that, but the CA was outright fired. Not even SWAPA will get her job back. In fact, it seems SWAPA is fine with the firing.
I also don't know what 'managamous' is. It's not in the dictionary.
Ya think that maybe her enormous disciplinary file and multiple pro Stan interventions might have added weight to her termination? Or are we just selectively parsing arguments?