Nark
Macho Superpilot
I'll be honest, I cannot fathom how a Union will benefit me.
A company is making money, great. A Company loses money needs to trim the fat, so fire (furlough) a few people to lean out. It's how the capitalist world turns.
When I was 16-18 I worked at a grocery store. I was part of a union that limited me to 20 hours a week. I saw hard workers be capped at 20 hours/week until they hit 5 year seniority and crappy workers the exact same. Promoting was based on date or hire, not work performance. Sound familiar?
Now lets talk about flying. Airlines/121 are pretty much unionized, corporate/135 not so much. Yet both seem to get people from A to B safely, (relatively). I could care less about 1 let alone 500 passengers I carry. As long as I get there, so will my passengers.
Why is it that an FO on a Challenger 604 makes 2-3 times as much as a RJ FO does when the they are flying the exact same profiles?
Answer: Collective Bargaining Agreements. IE: The FAA mandates the duty day, the airline say's "you should work within the FAA rules." The union lobby is getting paid handsomely, with little to no results on that issue, but I digress...
Once hired with a business with a union, membership is a obligatory. It's like a gang initiation, except the bruises and scrapes go away after a month with the Crips, and the dues keep on coming out of the paycheck every two weeks.
So please explain to me why I should pay $12/paycheck to a group that "defends my interest's" but fails to note what my interest's are?
A company is making money, great. A Company loses money needs to trim the fat, so fire (furlough) a few people to lean out. It's how the capitalist world turns.
When I was 16-18 I worked at a grocery store. I was part of a union that limited me to 20 hours a week. I saw hard workers be capped at 20 hours/week until they hit 5 year seniority and crappy workers the exact same. Promoting was based on date or hire, not work performance. Sound familiar?
Now lets talk about flying. Airlines/121 are pretty much unionized, corporate/135 not so much. Yet both seem to get people from A to B safely, (relatively). I could care less about 1 let alone 500 passengers I carry. As long as I get there, so will my passengers.
Why is it that an FO on a Challenger 604 makes 2-3 times as much as a RJ FO does when the they are flying the exact same profiles?
Answer: Collective Bargaining Agreements. IE: The FAA mandates the duty day, the airline say's "you should work within the FAA rules." The union lobby is getting paid handsomely, with little to no results on that issue, but I digress...
Once hired with a business with a union, membership is a obligatory. It's like a gang initiation, except the bruises and scrapes go away after a month with the Crips, and the dues keep on coming out of the paycheck every two weeks.
So please explain to me why I should pay $12/paycheck to a group that "defends my interest's" but fails to note what my interest's are?