It has not been discussed but this does reveal the company's hand to some extent. They want the best they can get, unless you are a flow candidate. Flow candidates may not have the "resume" credentials of military pilots but AA will have time to evaluate these candidates over their history of training and work with the regional partners. "She said she had no way of looking up my records via PRIA, and that I'm an unknown." The flow program takes care of the "unknown" aspect of someone's background. It doesn't mean they are better than someone else, it just means they are a known quantity.
What is somewhat obscured by all of this is that the "flow" program is not so much a pilot qualification program as it is a "cost control" program. Parker has said in several "Crew News" meetings, (quarterly meetings in CLT and DFW at the training centers where those in recurrent or initial get free lunch and an opportunity for questions and answers), that this is designed to deal with the pilot shortage and give opportunities to those who want a full career in with a major airline.
A news report states the following:
It, (proposed contract), also is offering signing bonuses on date of signing and a promise that Envoy pilots will be able to flow to American Airlines new-hire classes as slots become available.
But it caps the number of annual steps in the pay rates. It freezes pay tables through 2016 and provides for only 1 percent annual raises for the next seven years. Pilots will have to pick up a greater percentage of their insurance premiums. Profit sharing will end.
The current and future retirement numbers certainly lend credence to Parker's plan.