Do you have to live with the contract? No? Then let them decide. It's their job, their contract, their choice. Maybe it isn't the pay rate necessarily that is a hold up but rather additional language that needs to be reworked and adjusted.In that case, I'm hearing bankruptcy and everyone on the street. They can't afford more, folks. It's that simple.
I read about 5 paragraphs into the thing and floated to the ceiling. Any decent judge would throw that out simply for wasting everybody's time. An excess of legal verbiage is what appears when principles disappear. What a crock our society has become. So very sad.Oh, Bedford.
I read about 5 paragraphs into the thing and floated to the ceiling. Any decent judge would throw that out simply for wasting everybody's time. An excess of legal verbiage is what appears when principles disappear. What a crock our society has become. So very sad.
I'm going to go weed my onions now. The sweet corn is in full ripeness.
Corvous is a regional carrier based in Alaska and they have the highest hourly pay rate amongst regionals. In addition they have the highest take home pay after all taxes deducted. No City or State tax or something of that nature. Operating Dash-8's in Alaska. They have industry leading wages.
Come on! Why don't we just sit back and see what they decide.
When did you start working in management at RAH? Unless you actually have your nose in their books and financials, I would hardly say you can make that statement.
Do you have to live with the contract? No? Then let them decide. It's their job, their contract, their choice. Maybe it isn't the pay rate necessarily that is a hold up but rather additional language that needs to be reworked and adjusted.
ATN_Pilot said:Republic is a publicly traded company. This stuff ain't top secret, folks. Look at the numbers.
Im mostly concerned at how RAH would be able to pull off a chapter 11.
They've already figured that out. It's up the pilots to decide whether they want to continue being employed or not.
ATN_Pilot said:You must be under the mistaken impression that bankruptcy can only be filed when you're actually out of money. Not so. But RJET isn't too far from that point, anyway.
Sorry, but I take thousands of lost jobs and millions of screwed shareholders a bit more seriously than that.
Republic is a publicly traded company. This stuff ain't top secret, folks. Look at the numbers..
I understand that. I'm guess I'm looking for something more in depth. Way above my pay grade. Like how much cash do we have vs how much do we need vs how much is prudent? How big of a trend in the wrong direction are we? How far can we go until BK court considers a case for a chapter 11 restructure? What's up the early debt repayments everyone talks about? Heck, what are even some of the questions I should be asking.
You know, those kinds of things. I can fly a plane and run some trim but I have zero background in reading a companies financials.
Airline analysts like to see at least 20% of revenue held in cash reserves to be safe. At the very least, 15% is considered the minimum for an airline. RJET is currently at 13% and falling. Free cash flow is negative. By a lot.
The bankruptcy court will basically consider their petition at any time, justified or not. It's up to the creditors to make an argument in court that the company is filing a sham bankruptcy, and in this case, they don't have much of an argument, as RJET is in an untenable position. Hell, many of the creditors would probably welcome it, as they probably view the IBT as so unreasonable that a filing is the only way to move forward.
It's time for the mainline carriers to figure out they need to bring all this large RJ flying back to mainline.
QOL issues are in fact the most expensive in many cases. And yes, when you're just barely showing a net margin as it is (while hemorrhaging actual cash, mind you), that's the difference between solvency and not.
It would allow them to get planes off the books that they are paying for but can't fly because of no crew.I'm failing to see how a bankruptcy would help as pilots would bail even faster and anyone with a pulse and an Internet connection would go elsewhere.