Tim Nelson
Veteran
There are things in the sAA bankrupt contract that do actually cost more than the sUS contract. The IAMPF for one is less costly on the company than the 401k at sAA. Although I like the idea of a 5.5% match on total earnings [$1.27 hr], and more since it also includes overtime in total earnings, the sUS get less. 40% of sUS gets only half of what the company puts in the sAA retirement with a .65 per hour shake which is appalling.ograc said:Crazy indeed. Yet that is the company's vantage point going into negotiations. Total cost of the entire compensation package when comparing one work group to the other. The fact it's a comparison of a bankruptcy contract vs. a profitable airline's section 6 proposal doesn't factor into their equation. Additionally, I believe it doesn't factor into the NMB's vantage point either. That is why the company feels very comfortable the NMB will not release. The company is confident the NMB will view their proposals as reasonable movement and prolong the negotiating process. As long as they look at negotiation proposals in this light; they will always believe their proposal is fair. It's the total compensation package folks... not just hourly wage. With that being said... who has better language concerning sick time, vacation time, employee medical contribution rates, scope/job protection language and pension benefits? Everyone needs to understand this is the battle environment our NC is in. Right or wrong; this is the mindset of the company they are negotiating with. This is the mindset of the company we work for. This is the company's mentality our NC faces in negotiations. The best we can do, as members, in the meantime, is remain united behind our NC and show some solidarity!
LOCK and LOAD!
Amazingly, as United coughed up their industry leading health care, the sUS health care now is the best if one is full time. But not by much when considering 40% of our workforce has to pay double payments because of the part time status. I myself would prefer sAA sick pay since it is full sick pay, albeit 4 less days accrued a year. Most folks who use 9 sick days a year will find themselves on the discipline ladder so I like the sAA full sick pay over sUS half pay. Holidays are another wash. I think sAA gets only 5 holidays but they get holiday premium pay which sUS does not. sUS gets 7 holidays but no premium pay for working them. I like the wage progression at sAA of 9 years as opposed to the sUS 11 year progression. Toss in the $1.50 lead pay at sAA as opposed to the $1.01 pay at sUS, and the September wage of $23 over the $20.57 and it appears to me that DP has some fuzzy math.
Just a straight base wage is a difference of $5,000. Toss in the lead pay difference, and since most of the overtime at sUS is 1.5, as well as all the OT at sAA, that overtime sAA overtime is also more expensive in total.
Again, I think management is doing fuzzy math. But whatever the case, CB is correct, we are negotiating outside of bankruptcy plus management isn't apparently anywhere close to being fair. The risk for management is to stall out the merger. We do have merger leverage on the union side. I mean, nobody has to agree to bring both groups together in a joint contract unless things are squared up. Even if single carrier is ruled, have to hope that the IAM stays in stand alone talks or this will be another exercise in disaster.