Spirit Airlines Strike Update

2 years ago, I had the spirit mec leader try and jumpseat with us, dispatch and the gate agent said that we couldnt, but after sitting in the run up pad for a half hour and flying at 15000 feet to the destination, we got him there. Tomorrow I will do the same for any of you in DTW
 
20 minutes... any 11th hour miracles happening?

Let's hope.

Ours didn't last that long, but the ATA may be pressing Spirit management to prove a point. Keep in mind that airlines have their own "association" that somewhat calls the shots for the industry.
 
Well midnight has passed and no word from the table. BB was flown to DC today, but that's all we know.

There are a lot of people here in FLL! Drivers are honking horns in support. Passengers are upset, but the company totally mishandled it. They really thought we would cross or that they could find contractors. We prepared; they didn't.
 
Well midnight has passed and no word from the table. BB was flown to DC today, but that's all we know.

There are a lot of people here in FLL! Drivers are honking horns in support. Passengers are upset, but the company totally mishandled it. They really thought we would cross or that they could find contractors. We prepared; they didn't.


HOOAH!


Give 'em hell, Spirit!
 
Ben's got a vested interest now--his job is on the line. They really thought they were going to break the union. Instead they are eroding the $100 million in 2010 profits the investors want to see with their games. All they had to do was sit down and negotiate.
 
Ben's got a vested interest now--his job is on the line. They really thought they were going to break the union. Instead they are eroding the $100 million in 2010 profits the investors want to see with their games. All they had to do was sit down and negotiate.

I think there were a couple management firings after the Skyway strike as well.
 
Spirit Airlines talks extended 2 hours

JOSHUA FREED | June 12, 2010 12:45 AM EST |

Negotiations between Spirit Airlines and its pilots were extended an extra two hours, the union said early Saturday.

A union hot line message recorded soon after the 12:01 a.m. EDT strike deadline said the National Mediation Board asked for the talks in Washington to continue. Pilots had been threatening to walk out if there was no deal by then.

A union website also said the delay was "in order to receive additional company proposals." It said the new strike deadline was 2 a.m. EDT Saturday.

Spirit spokeswoman Misty Pinson confirmed the extension.

Both sides had said that they hoped to make a deal, and strike threats are a common feature of the endgame of airline negotiations.

Still, a pilot strike at Spirit could disrupt travel plans for thousands of passengers. The airline canceled some flights in advance.

Cousins Greg Watson, 44, and Doug Ferraro, 43, were among the passengers affected by the cancellations. They made it from Tampa, Fla., to Spirit's hub in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on Friday, only to find that the next leg of their vacation to the Bahamas was canceled.

"We didn't even get a phone call – we showed up and they said they had no pilots," Watson said. "They don't have any back-up plan. This is the most disorganized thing I've ever seen – it's ridiculous."

They were given $75 to take a taxi to the Miami airport so they could try to catch a flight from there. They said they would never fly Spirit again.

"I've already got someone working on a nasty letter," Ferraro said.

Spirit pilots have said their pay lags that of competitors like JetBlue Airways Corp. and AirTran Airways, part of AirTran Holdings Inc.

"We are looking for pay parity," said Sean Creed, a Spirit captain and the head of the Air Line Pilots Association unit there, in a recent interview. "We're not looking to be industry leading," he said. "We're not looking to place the company at an economic disadvantage."

President Barack Obama can halt an airline strike, but that was considered unlikely because of Spirit's small size. It runs roughly 150 flights per day, compared to 6,200 for Delta Air Lines Inc., the world's largest carrier.

Spirit is based in Miramar, Fla. Most of its flights originate in the eastern U.S. and connect to Latin America, many of them through Fort Lauderdale. It dubs itself an ultra low-cost carrier, and says that some of its tickets go for $9. It attracted notice recently when it announced that beginning Aug. 1 it would charge passengers up to $45 for carry-on bags.

The airline is privately held. Creed said pilots got along well with Spirit's previous owners, but the current owners have shown "a marked difference in how they treated employees."

Spirit has said it would operate through any strike with the help of other air carriers, but it has not offered details. On Thursday Spirit began canceling flights and stopped selling tickets for its Saturday and Sunday flights.

While workers in other industries, and airline workers in Europe, are relatively free to strike, U.S. airline workers are bound by the rules of the Railway Labor Act, which tightly restricts work actions in the interest of keeping the transportation system moving. That makes U.S. airline strikes relatively rare. The Spirit pilot contract has been up for changes since January 2007.

Bob and Christine Koehler of Sarasota, Fla., were also stuck for hours at the Fort Lauderdale airport on Friday because of a canceled Spirit flight.

"It's 'sit back and wait until they tell you,'" Bob Koehler said. "It's a mess. They have no regard for anybody else's time."

___

Associated Press Writer Travis Reed in Fort Lauderdale contributed to this report.
 
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