wheelsup
Well-Known Member
CFIse said:You need to try and separate who I work for and what I do for a living from my views and opinions on the state of the industry.
In fact frankly half the problem with the industry at the moment is that people aren't willing to deal with the realities of the industry but they'd far rather deal with some other reality that does't exist now and won't exist for the forseeable future.
I don't like that the Delta pilots rolled over, or that the NorthWest pilots rolled over, or that the Mesaba pilots will roll over (you read it here first) but I understand why they did and, given the state of the industry it was probably the best decision for them.
That's why I think the PSA pilots would have been better off taking the 900s. That's why I think if it had been put to a vote, regardless of what people say in the crew room or in public, the PSA pilots would have voted to take the 900s because in the end, in the privacy of your little voting world, self interest rules (see the Delta, NorthWest, Mesaba pilots above).
Let's look at this way - clearly there is an over-supply of pilots, anybody here who was selfish enough to go and get a pilots certificate and build the hours to qualify for an airline job is just adding to the over-supply and they shouldn't have done it, and it's wrong, and they're not supporting their fellow pilots. Now - see how stupid that sounds?
CFIse,
You make good points. That being said, that is some yummy koolaid you are drinking and you should put down your copy of "Mesa Muscle". When you see what we are saying - that if pilots actually stick together instead of agree to undercut - we can all get more airplanes AND payraises. Isn't that what we all want?
"Reality of the Industry"? Oh you mean fuel prices. Explain how FedEx and UPS can post record profits but the pax carriers can not. Overcapacity you say? Interesting. Capacity has been getting cut quarter after quarter, airplanes are a RECORD HIGH levels of load factor, and yet airlines are still losing money?
The PSA pilots are putting their foot down here (their MEC speaks for them). If US Air wants bigger airplanes that's fine, just pay more. That's all they're asking. Here's an idea - why accept greater responsibility and work without an increase in compensation?
Airlines must find a way to increase revenue without taking from their employees pockets. If gas magically dropped to $0.25/gal airlines would just charge $40.00 roundtrip instead of $100.00. Thank god there are some pilots with backbones that can say "NO!" when a • deal is put on the table.