kellwolf
Piece of Trash
The problem is that allowing labor to simply refuse to go to work when they disagree with an interpretation means that labor has the ability to shut down the operation. In other words, pseudo-strike. That gives labor all of the power, and there is no way that any lawmaker would ever agree to such a thing. There has to be a balance of power between labor and management.
I can see that, but my problem is when there's a BLATANT violation of the contract. If I KNOW I'm right to stand my ground, why should we have a "fly now, grieve later" mentality? That just allows the company to violate the contract when they see fit to make the operation run, say "Ooops, we messed up" 6-9 months down the road when you eventually get to the grievance hearing, and you might get a couple of bucks or an extra day off. End result is the company got away with violating the contract when they needed to, which was the whole point of having whatever they violated in place to begin with.
For example, let's say (before Part 117 for simplicity's sake) your contract said you were a pumpkin after 14 hours of duty. You duty on at 7 am, and it's now 7:30 pm. Your flight is delayed, and you'll go past 14 hours of duty by the time you're scheduled to land. Company says "Nope. You dutied on at 8 am since your flight in the morning was delayed." You've got the schedule in your hand that says you started at 7 am. Math is universal in this case, so you're 100% in the right. Company is still pushing. CP isn't answering, and the on call duty manager is a scheduling supervisor, so we know which way they're pushing you. No FARs are being violated since you'd be done inside of 16 hours, so the FAA doesn't really care either. However, your union rep says "Fly it. We'll grieve it later." Why is this the case? Everyone can friggin add 7+14 to get "You're timed out." It's not my fault there's a snowstorm in JFK and my ORF flight is delayed. But if I say "I'm not doing it," even though I'm 100% right (and there's really no "interpretation" here), I get in trouble for it. That's my biggest beef with CBAs in the current environment. There are ironclad rules there, but when put in a situation where the company is violating them, we've really got no teeth if they dig in and say "Do it." And yeah, this did happen to me. Yeah, I filed a grievance. I got a whopping 1:30 at JM pay 6 months later for the one leg I flew. The company didn't have to cancel their flight, so I'm sure they were over the moon that that's all they had to shell out. They'll take that deal any day of the week......