Airdale
Well-Known Member
I don't think this is crossing the line posting this here, but if it is just let me know.
I think this is the best letter from ALPA I've received yet. Rock the Vote!! :rawk:
I think this is the best letter from ALPA I've received yet. Rock the Vote!! :rawk:
August 1, 2007
Dear Fellow Pilot:
As we expected, Colgan pilots are now receiving a stream of communications from management, far more than any of you have received in a number of years. The message is also not surprising—“Trust us…we will take care of you. Don’t let a union come between us.”
Best wishes and goodwill are nice, but they provide little protection for your job and career. You are now owned by Pinnacle. Was any pilot consulted about the sale of Colgan to Pinnacle before the deal was closed? What sort of protection for your jobs, wages, or benefits—if any—is in the sales agreement? Or did the owners just do what all owners in this industry do—maximize their profits and return on investment?
Your management suggests that having a collective bargaining agreement governing its relations with you will somehow destroy the “family” you are now part of. As I’m sure most of you know, today’s airline industry is not a family affair, at least not for employees. Companies are flipped, merged, purchased and restructured on a monthly basis to increase profits for those who own them. If jobs are lost or wages are cut in the process, that is the price that employees must pay unless there is a legally binding commitment preventing such a result. Owners and managers understand this and do not rely on family loyalty when it comes to themselves; instead almost all have contracts with the corporations they service dictating wages, bonuses, stock options and—in recognition of the fact that they may be here today and gone tomorrow—severance.
Better than ninety percent of airline pilots are covered by collective bargaining agreements and the majority of those agreements are negotiated and administered by ALPA. This includes every carrier you feed as well as the pilots in the other parts of the Pinnacle “family”. ALPA members and the pilots they elect as their representatives regularly get together to discuss and resolve issues that affect our profession, from safety and security issues to reaching common goals in collective bargaining. That’s what it means to part of the ALPA pilot family.
In a deregulated, post 9/11 world, the vast majority of professional pilots understand that goodwill is not a substitute for a solid agreement backed by an organization with the resources to enforce it. These pilots also understand that when they must face the FAA, the TSA, or Customs, their employer’s best wishes are no substitute for the professional representation available from the ALPA legal, safety, or medical departments.
You can choose to stake your future on the Colgan “family” now controlled by Pinnacle. Or you can choose to have a voice in your future at Colgan and in the pilot profession by joining the family of ALPA professionals. The decision is yours, but the choice of the vast majority of your colleagues throughout the profession is clear.
The ballots are now out – I encourage you to cast your vote for ALPA. The voting period started July 31 and will run until August 21. To find out more information, please visit www.alpa.org/colgan.
Fraternally,
Capt. John Prater
President