Back to your love affair with the VEOP, I looked at what the company has out there again. It clearly states that there will be reduced or no furloughs depending on acceptance volume and potentially new hires with in a year. Sounds like they plan on accepting a lot if people want them. It also CLEARLY states no raises if not voted in. This would be the Term sheet/LBFO comparison on AA FLT SVC.
Yeah, and back in 2003 "Pull Together, Win Together"
sounded like the executives planned to share in the sacrifice, didn't it? Instead of looking at the comparison table between the term sheet and the LBFO, try looking at the
actual LBFO which is also available on the AA FLT SVC website.
From the LBFO, page 1...
"The company will have discretion to
limit the maximum number of acceptances and determine when flight attendant can separate based on operational requirements."
I know what the company and the union say. The sentence above is what the LBFO says. I don't have a love affair with the VEOP. As you say, I'm not even eligible. But, if there is a discrepancy this big on page one of the document, what other gotchas are hidden in the rest? We've been down this path before. "Oh, you didn't think we could change so and so? Well, maybe you should have read the agreement more closely before voting."
Fortunately, I don't have to stick around for the bloodbath. You vote how you want. I'll vote how I want. And, regardless of which option goes into effect, if the work situation becomes intolerable, I can just retire. And, don't start that I need to "think of other flight attendants who don't have that option." Maybe, you all could have thought of me and several thousand other flight attendants who got furloughed so that you wouldn't have to take bigger pay cuts.
The APFA proved in 1993(??? I can never remember the date. It was before my time. lol) that they were capable of calling the company's bluff and winning. Since then it seems that the attitude has become "well the TA is better than a sharp stick in the eye." Except for the 2001 contract, and we saw how long that lasted.
The company is trying to turn the career of flight attendant back into a temporary job where young men and women of good families and freshly-minted college degrees do the job for 4-5 years until they've seen the world or gotten sick of the long hours and the short layovers. Since the law no longer allows restrictions like "under 32, must be attractive, etc" they have to find another way to get flight attendants to leave before the company has to deal with health issues, retirement plans (DB or 401K or whatever), pay raises, and so forth. Using the "lesser of two evils" form of voting choice enables this goal.