Hopeful
Veteran
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- Dec 21, 2002
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AA wanted unlimited codesharing so that they could take labor out of the decision process....
Or maybe just take labor OUT..period.
AA wanted unlimited codesharing so that they could take labor out of the decision process....
Owens - Schalk - Peterson, and all remaining AMFA clones:
All of you are missing the point. The judge was evaluating the term sheet, not the Company’s LBFO to the pilots. All the Company has to do to achieve abrogation is to change its term sheet to match up with its LBFO on these two items. On everything else the term sheet is far worse than the LBFO, and they will be allowed to impose the term sheet. So tell me what have they gained except, possibly, a few weeks? The judge approved of the Company’s business plan and rejected every one of the pilot’s valuation claims. He acknowledged that they will now be near the bottom of the industry, a result which he said is typical in a bankruptcy and gave him no problem. He has allowed huge concessions in scope. This is why the APFA has correctly stated that the judge ruled against the pilots on every significant item.
You keep saying that the judge would have found problems with the tentative agreement and told the Company to improve it. The judge wasn’t looking at the tentative agreement, he was evaluating the term sheet. If he found problems with the term sheet provided to the TWU (which is speculation because he only took issue with pilot specific matters) this decision makes clear he would have temporarily denied the motion and allowed AA to correct the term sheet. Once this happens we would have been exposed to the balance of the term sheet which calls for more lay offs, less pay, less, pension, and more outsourcing. So tell me how more jobs would have been saved if we rejected the LBF.
Owens - Schalk - Peterson, and all remaining AMFA clones:
All of you are missing the point. The judge was evaluating the term sheet, not the Company’s LBFO to the pilots. All the Company has to do to achieve abrogation is to change its term sheet to match up with its LBFO on these two items. On everything else the term sheet is far worse than the LBFO, and they will be allowed to impose the term sheet. So tell me what have they gained except, possibly, a few weeks? The judge approved of the Company’s business plan and rejected every one of the pilot’s valuation claims. He acknowledged that they will now be near the bottom of the industry, a result which he said is typical in a bankruptcy and gave him no problem. He has allowed huge concessions in scope. This is why the APFA has correctly stated that the judge ruled against the pilots on every significant item.
You keep saying that the judge would have found problems with the tentative agreement and told the Company to improve it. The judge wasn’t looking at the tentative agreement, he was evaluating the term sheet. If he found problems with the term sheet provided to the TWU (which is speculation because he only took issue with pilot specific matters) this decision makes clear he would have temporarily denied the motion and allowed AA to correct the term sheet. Once this happens we would have been exposed to the balance of the term sheet which calls for more lay offs, less pay, less, pension, and more outsourcing. So tell me how more jobs would have been saved if we rejected the LBF.
You accuse Owens, Schalk, Petersen, and others of costing you alot of money....How about those in the TWU heirarchy who are IMMUNE FROM WHAT THEY HAVE DONE TO US OVER THE YEARS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Don't waste your time trying to explain it to those ass clowns! They only see what they want to see and everyone else is wrong! Those clowns have cost us all a lot of money although we are all free to vote the way we want to.
Should certainly put to rest the OWS-style nonsense that federal bankruptcy courts merely rubberstamp the demands of the 1% and are bought and paid for by the man, but it probably won't.Yea, it is obvious....And most likely will change the denial to approval of the abrogation request.
But when you think about, the fact that he denied the request on TWO provisions concerned him so much that he denied abrogation. That in itself says something.
Should certainly put to rest the OWS-style nonsense that federal bankruptcy courts merely rubberstamp the demands of the 1% and are bought and paid for by the man, but it probably won't.
I'll admit that I wasn't smart enough to see it before, but reading the judge's decision makes it clear that whomever wanted the unlimited domestic codesharing and unlimited rights to furlough completely failed to make the case for them. The competition doesn't have those nor are they really necessary. AA got sloppy, tried to slip one past everybody, and the judge called them out on it.
How about the ass clowns that voted in 9 years of voluntary concessions in 2003.....oh, and the ass clowns that diminished the a&p license by voting in SRP's in 1995......oh, and the new ass clowns that just voluntarily gave the company 6 more years of concessions. The ass clowns you refer to is called the Transport Workers Union of America. Too bad the real clowns at the top are laughing all the way to the bank.....on your dime.....ass clown!Don't waste your time trying to explain it to those ass clowns! They only see what they want to see and everyone else is wrong! Those clowns have cost us all a lot of money although we are all free to vote the way we want to.
Are you really too stupid to see that even by your own logic the APA gained having at minimum the LBFO furlough and codeshare imposed instead of the original Term Sheet and negotiations will continue?
Tell me that you are not that ignorant to see that is what you just confirmed and described?
Where did you read that negotiations will continue? I must have missed that. All I have seen is that A/A will amend those two sections and resubmit on Friday to complete the abrogation and imposition of the 3/21 term sheet.
Sure, AA will continue negotiating with the pilots, but AA already released a statement that it will file its revised 1113 motion by tomorrow and if AA deletes the unlimited codesharing and changes to furlough provisions, it knows how the Judge will rule. Excise those provisions and AA gets authority to abrogate the contract. Once abrogated, I'm sure that negotiations will continue, but there's no rush to improve on the LBO if AA has the power to impose the term sheet.Anyone that thinks AA won't keep neg with pilots is truly a fool
Sure, but those were not the only things the pilots had that was industry leading, they are not at the bottom as far as Pay, Holidays, Vacation, sick time etc etc. What AA was demanding from M&R, and got, was unprecidented. We had a much better case than the pilots against abrogation because the only things that we had, the Pension and retiree medical, we were willing to bargain, but the International and their "Experts" said that abrogation was all but guaranteed. The company was not demanding that the pilots settle for bottom of the industry in nearly every category like they were with us.
I'm betting that AA is in for a rude awakening if they decide to pursue abrogation......if you can read between the lines of APA Presidents statement to the pilots....."providing additional resources to the strke preparedness committee operations".......not exactly sure where AA will find 10K pilots by Saturday morning.Anyone that thinks AA won't keep neg with pilots is truly a fool
Negative buddy. They gained nothing on the furlough language. Judge Lane stated that AA did not present adequate arguments to abrogate the existing APA language that limits furloughs to 2,000 which would have allowed AA no restrictions on RIFs. AA's current business plan has pilot RIF's at 400 so they can RIF up to 2,000 more.Are you really too stupid to see that even by your own logic the APA gained having at minimum the LBFO furlough and codeshare imposed instead of the original Term Sheet and negotiations will continue?
Tell me that you are not that ignorant to see that is what you just confirmed and described?