SlumTodd_Millionaire
Most Hated Member
No question that having unions to protect pilots when they make mistakes is good for the pilots, but a 100% correlation between safety and unionism like Seggy is inferring is not correct.
Seggy has not implied* that, actually. He has stated that a union makes an airline safer, not that a unionized airline will always be safer by every metric than a non-union airline. Sometimes there is a rare non-union airline whose management creates a great safety culture, while a unionized airline has a union that has to fight non-stop to make the carrier safe while management cuts corners left and right. But, and this is the important part, every airline will always be safer with a union than it would be without, because it provides protection for a pilot who needs to blow the whistle.
In fact, I might argue that having too strong of a union can keep incompetent pilots employed when they are a risk to the airline.
Complete myth. I represented hundreds of pilots during my union career, and yes, a few of them were flat out dangerous. I represented them to the absolute best of my ability, because that was my job. You know what happened to them? They got fired because they deserved to be fired, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. Because the system works.
It can also result in seniority based upgrades of pilots who are not ready or capable of the position.
Wrong again. The job of the training department is to ensure that this does not happen, and no union contract prevents a training department from doing that necessary job. A union seniority number only gives you a chance at upgrade. It doesn't give you an upgrade. Only performance can do that.
* A listener infers; a speaker implies