Bandit_Driver
Gold Member
The holding group idea didn't work too well for the Shuttle America pilots. The list didn't stay seperate for long and they all ended up getting somewhat stapled in CHQ's list.
The holding group idea didn't work too well for the Shuttle America pilots. The list didn't stay seperate for long and they all ended up getting somewhat stapled in CHQ's list.
'Course maybe that's b/c I fly for an airline owned by a holding company with a potential whipsaw over my head. If that started happening at the major level, it would pretty much be the end of the profession as we know it.
They got merged on to the list through the RLA protocols. I guess you were S5. The arbitrator didn't make anyone happy, so he did his job.
I wouldn't say he made everyone unhappy. It was pretty much a one sided meger as the S5 FO's lost seniority, upgrades, and some were forced to take pay cust and ALL CA's were downgraded to FO's.
I would imagine it is going to be quite a battle to merge the DL and NWA lists.
Delta Accord Paves Way for Northwest Deal, People Say (Update1)
By [bnRSN=1] Mary Jane Credeur [] and [bn
RSN=1] Mary Schlangenstein []
April 10 (Bloomberg) -- Delta Air Lines Inc. and its pilots agreed on a tentative contract to clear the way for a merger with Northwest Airlines Corp. that would create the world's largest carrier, people familiar with the talks said.
The pilot accord includes higher pay and an equity stake in the combined airline, which would keep Delta's name and Atlanta headquarters, said the people, who didn't want to be identified because the plan is still private. The tie-up may be announced next week, the people said.
To work around an impasse between Delta and Northwest pilots, who couldn't agree on how to mesh their ranks, Delta is drawing up the new contract with just its 7,000 pilots, said the people. Northwest's 5,000 pilots will be asked to join under a single contract later, the people said.
Negotiations to create a combined seniority list may take months to complete, the people said. Pilots for both companies are represented by the Air Line Pilots Association.
The merger includes a small premium for Northwest investors, three of the people said.
Delta spokeswoman Betsy Talton declined to comment, other than to reiterate that the company's board committee to assess mergers remains active. Tammy Lee, a spokeswoman for Eagan, Minnesota-based Northwest, declined to comment.
To contact the reporters on this story: Mary Jane Credeur in Atlanta at mcredeur@bloomberg.net; Mary Schlangenstein in Dallas at maryc.s@kbloomberg.net
I wouldn't say he made everyone unhappy. It was pretty much a one sided meger as the S5 FO's lost seniority, upgrades, and some were forced to take pay cust and ALL CA's were downgraded to FO's.
I would imagine it is going to be quite a battle to merge the DL and NWA lists.
I fail to understand why it's so difficult to merge pilot lists?
Can someone explain...
I mean surely you just take date started with the airline (whichever airline that is) and rank everyone by their start date.
What's so difficult about that?
Just develop a single "Holding" company, and operate the two companies with seperately.
No need to merge the lists anymore, and keep them seperate.
Oh I know that possibility exists. . .BUT. . .I would hope (*gasp*) that we have some more stable minds at both NWA and Delta than at US Airways.
I can agree on your point that the Captain's got somewhat hosed, but most of the FO's I think had it alright. I was pushed down 20 numbers by FOs, and lost 6 months of seniority gained...add the captain's to the equation, and I had a lower number then what I started at the previous year. The FO's now enjoy seniority numbers in the 800-900 range out of a company of 2200 pilots, and can all have easily have held captain positions in the 170 by now. They weren't stapled by any means, and overall made out well.
What irked me the most about the integration was that the top 700 or so pilots at the time didn't get bumped down even one seniority number. Only the bottom 500, along with the S5 pilots had to deal with the issues of lost seniority. Talk about the guys at the top negotiating a sweet deal for themselves at the expense of those most junior- business as usual in the airline industry.
As already reported, a deal between the airlines has been in limbo since January because pilots couldn't come to an amicable compromise on seniority, which ultimately determines the size of a pilot's paycheck. Delta has said it wouldn't agree to a merger until its workforce was fully on board.
On Friday, Credit Suisse raised its rating for Delta and Northwest to outperform from neutral in part because of a tentative agreement between pilots, giving the green light on a merger deal the investment firm said is imminent.