The flight schedule has not been significantly reduced yet, and every time we cancel a flight with short notice for any reason it is extremely costly, disruptive to the operation and stressful on our guests and coworkers. As of this writing, we have canceled 29 flights due to pilot staffing in the last four days.
Thats just mainline.Oof.
Is that including w/o airframes?
Where is this?Meanwhile, at my credit card company with airplanes, they haven't canceled any flights so guys are taking it into their own hands. It's getting ugly. From a management update last night:
ASWhere is this?
Airports are almost going to be ghost towns the next few months. At what point does every airline shutting everything down for a shorter period of time become less costly than dragging this out?
Airports are almost going to be ghost towns the next few months. At what point does every airline shutting everything down for a shorter period of time become less costly than dragging this out?
From most airlines I’ve seen with mixed fleet, furlough isn’t the route they want to go because it would then create a massive training backlog. Everyone is banking on this being short term, meaning less than a year, so low hour months and leaves are the way they are going.Agreed. Lots of money being spent to operate a very reduced fleet. I feel like furloughs are inevitable at this point (for most (?) workgroups) so why not stop the money bleed now until we get further down the road on this?
I guess the counter-argument is that no one knows how long this will drag out so why stop when this could be turning around by May?
Interesting times.
Didn’t the German government shut down the airspace first of did Lufthansa park the fleet first?Lufthansa Group has gone that route (with a few exceptions) has have a few other European carriers. Nobody in the US is going to want to be the first to blink and give up market share, even if there isn't actually any market right now.
The later.I haven't been in the industry long enough to see a furlough. Do they furlough a percentage of FOs and CAs, or just start from the bottom of the seniority list and go up? Wouldn't that create a big imbalance and cause training costs if they downgrade people?
I haven't been in the industry long enough to see a furlough. Do they furlough a percentage of FOs and CAs, or just start from the bottom of the seniority list and go up? Wouldn't that create a big imbalance and cause training costs if they downgrade people?
Internal comms from just a couple hours ago at Piedmont says that AA has directed us to start consolidating flights. Likely the case for the other WO carriers.Oof.
Is that including w/o airframes?
Meanwhile, at my credit card company with airplanes, they haven't canceled any flights so guys are taking it into their own hands. It's getting ugly. From a management update last night:
Yeah it appears that way. The company has been very slow to respond and only talked about offering leaves and canceling flights but hasn't done it yet. Seeing as they've put all their eggs in the SEA basket and it's the epicenter of the pandemic here, we're gonna have a tough road ahead weathering this. Also with San Fransisco and Los Angeles locked down too it compounds things.Wait what? Are people just not flying trips now?
Meanwhile, at my credit card company with airplanes, they haven't canceled any flights so guys are taking it into their own hands. It's getting ugly. From a management update last night:
If I understand this correctly, until the code share customer tells us to cancel. That way we get paid for the flight. Had two legs yesterday that weren't terrible, 23/76 and 28/76, on that route EWR-MUHA, they are usually close to full. I've seen some random cancellations where I guess the code share partner is trying to save the fuel cost.I wonder how the FFD, Contract, carriers deal with this. Since they are under contract are they to keep flying empty airplanes and carry on business as usual?