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AMFA files for single carrier status for Alaska/Hawaiian merger

If I bug you so much report me, again.
Not only is he trying to ignore you, and not answer on the profit sharing issues, he has gotten awful quiet since the NMB ruled against the IAM recently and since some evidence of ballot tampering has come to light with the NMB over at the Alaska/Hawaiian representational vote being conducted between AMFA/IAM. I guess just like the teamsters had to do the IAM shall try to follow by interfering with ballot tampering in order to try and keep AMFA from winning yet ANOTHER representational election within our industry.
C'mon Feb 12th!!! Ballot Count Day!!! Another day and movement in 2026 where we should see another industrial union removed from representing our Mechanics Class and Craft in our industry...
 
Some more updates and great history to read between the AMFA and IAM representation.
With just 8 days left (we hope dep on Gov shut down and all) Some comparo's in AMFA and IAM past 20 years in the airlines industry. It really does pay to go AMFA:

The Difference Between a Union That Promises Job Security and One That Actually Delivers It
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Feb 04, 2026
February 2, 2026​
For aircraft maintenance technicians, job security is not an abstraction. It is the difference between a career spent building mastery on complex aircraft systems and a pink slip issued when work is quietly shifted to a hangar thousands of miles away. In today’s airline industry — where outsourcing, foreign repair stations, and cost-driven labor strategies are accelerating — the question is no longer which union talks most forcefully about protecting jobs. It is which union has actually done it.
20yrs_0_Jobs_Lost_to_Outsourcing.jpg
That distinction now sits at the center of the representation fight at the newly merged Alaska–Hawaiian Airlines. On one side is the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association (AMFA), a craft-specific union that represents only aircraft maintenance professionals. On the other is the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), an industrial union with a long history in aviation — and an equally long record of presiding over the largest offshore shift of U.S. maintenance work in the modern airline era.
The contrast between the two is not ideological. It is measurable.
For more than twenty years, not a single AMFA-represented aircraft maintenance technician or engineer has lost a job as a direct result of outsourcing. That is not marketing language. It is the product of contract provisions that include enforceable scope clauses, strict limits on vendor use, and, critically, no-furlough and no-layoff protections that have been tested — and upheld — in arbitration.
When the COVID-19 crisis brought the airline industry to the brink, carriers sought concessions and issued furlough notices across the system. At Alaska Airlines and Southwest, AMFA invoked those protections and took the cases to expedited arbitration. The result: every furlough was stopped. No layoffs. No forced relocations. No erosion of maintenance work. At a moment when “job security” was no longer theoretical, AMFA’s language held.
The same period revealed a very different pattern under IAM and its partner union, the Transport Workers Union (TWU), at the nation’s largest carriers. American Airlines, represented by IAM-TWU, now operates extensive heavy-maintenance and component overhaul facilities in Brazil, El Salvador, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Entire categories of work — widebody checks, landing gear overhaul, engine maintenance, composite and plating shops — have been shifted abroad, even as domestic bases in Tulsa, Kansas City, Fort Worth DWH, Fort Worth Alliance, Fort Worth TASEL, Charlotte and Pittsburgh were downsized or closed, eliminating thousands of U.S. maintenance jobs.
At Hawaiian Airlines, where IAM currently represents technicians, the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) explicitly allows the company to outsource line and heavy maintenance at any station outside the state of Hawaii. The airline now sends A330 and A321neo heavy checks to Singapore and the Philippines and contracts mainland scheduled line maintenance checks to third-party vendors. These are not isolated decisions; they are the direct outcome of scope language that permits offshoring as a business strategy.
The structural difference between the two unions helps explain the divergence. AMFA is a single-craft organization. It represents only aircraft maintenance technicians, engineers, and related skilled professionals. Every negotiation, every resource, every political priority is focused on technicians and engineers protecting their work. Its national officers are directly nominated and elected by its membership. Negotiations are open to observers. Members receive full tentative agreements before voting and have visibility into every line of scope and outsourcing language that governs their future.
IAM, by contrast, is an industrial union representing workers across dozens of industries and sectors, from aerospace manufacturing to rail, shipyards, and public transit. Aviation maintenance is one constituency among many. Scope language is often negotiated centrally, ratified without full disclosure of side agreements, and, in major cases such as American Airlines, approved without a direct membership vote on the outsourcing frameworks that enabled long-term offshore commitments.
History underscores the impact of those models. At American Airlines, IAM- and TWU-represented technicians saw the steady migration of heavy maintenance and engine overhaul to foreign facilities over the past two decades, even as the unions and the company reported those operations as “in-house” by classifying foreign American Airlines employees under the airline’s payroll. The unions and company claim of 33% outsourcing cap and result was a statistical mirage that masked the largest sustained export of U.S. maintenance work in the industry.
At Alaska Airlines, the story followed a different trajectory after aircraft technicians replaced IAM with AMFA in 1998. While AMFA inherited IAM scope language that allowed certain outsourcing, AMFA over years of bargaining, successfully used collective bargaining and arbitration to secure, and enforced all noticed furlough employees with those no-layoff protections and to retain 100 percent of scheduled line maintenance and checks. When the pandemic arrived, those negotiated clauses proved decisive not only for Alaska Airlines members, but all three AMFAs agreements at Southwest Airlines aircraft technicians, aircraft cleaners and facility technicians had similar layoff protection language.
Job protection, however, is only one side of the equation. The other is economic power. AMFA’s contracts over the past decade have reset wage standards across North America: the landmark Southwest agreement that delivered more than 20 percent raises and $160 million in retroactive pay; Alaska’s 2024 contract establishing an industry-leading top-of-scale rate, automatic annual increases and wage review; WestJet’s first collective agreement after a successful strike, producing 27 percent raises and a secured 20 percent employer retirement match; and recent deals at Horizon, Jazz, JTS, Calm Air, and Sun Country, all featuring double-digit gains and strengthened scope.
Those agreements have had a cascading effect. According to Bloomberg Law, AMFA’s Southwest contract alone drove a nationwide increase in union-negotiated maintenance wages. Membership has grown by more than 80 percent since 2018, fueled by technicians who see a union that pairs top-of-market pay with enforceable control over where their work is performed.
The political dimension reinforces the pattern. During the 2024 FAA reauthorization, AMFA successfully lobbied for expanded oversight of foreign repair stations and equalized safety and inspection standards for overseas MROs working on U.S. aircraft, while securing increased funding for domestic workforce development. The effort was aimed at closing the regulatory gaps that make offshoring attractive — and at strengthening the long-term viability of the U.S. maintenance workforce.
In the end, the difference between a union that promises job security and one that delivers it is not found in campaign mailers or press releases. It is found in arbitration awards, in scope clauses that survive corporate pressure, in furlough notices that never take effect, and in hangars that remain staffed by the people who built their careers there.
For the technicians of Alaska and Hawaiian Airlines, the choice now before them is not merely about representation. It is about which model will govern their future: one that has tolerated the steady migration of skilled work overseas, or one whose record shows that when it writes “no outsourcing” and “no furlough” into a contract, those words mean exactly what they say.
Bret Oestreich
National President
Full article also available:
Here's an update #1 from the NMB this week:

NMB Representation Election Update: Government Shutdown Update
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Feb 02, 2026
February 2, 2026​
Happy Groundhogs Day and just like the movie, the Federal government funding has once again lapsed during our NMB Union Election process. AMFA has received an update from the NMB that states, “The election schedule -- including the voting period, the schedule for all submissions (e.g., status changes), and the tally date -- remain unchanged for now. Once the NMB reopens, we may make adjustments to the schedule. We will notify you of any adjustments that are made”.
February 12, 2026, is still the deadline for your ballot to be delivered to the NMB. If the government shutdown extends past this date, the ballots will be held and counted once the Federal Government reopens again. If you have not mailed your ballot yet, please do so IMMEDIATELY! We will update the membership once we have anything further from the NMB that could impact the Union Election.
National Mediation Board
Office of Legal Affairs
1301 K Street NW, Suite 250E
Washington DC 20005​
Ballots are due at the NMB office by February 12, 2026.
Sincerely,
Brandon Statfield, AMFA Local 14 ALR
Jeff Heard, AMFA Local 32 ALR

And a message from our very own Mike Kekoa, A SWA Mechanic speaks on being an AMFA
represented Aviation Technician. Final week coming up for the vote count, get your ballots in.

AMFA Is ‘Ohana. Join a Union That Treats You Like Family.
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Feb 04, 2026
February 4, 2026​
Aloha, Hawaiian Airlines Family,
Beach.jpg
At AMFA, we believe a union should feel like family, a place where every Member is respected, supported and valued as a person, not just a number. That sense of ‘ohana is at the heart of who we are and how we represent our Members.
Just ask Mike Kekoa.
As an AMFA Member, Mike talks about how much it means to belong to a union that treats him with dignity, listens to his opinions and believes in giving back to others. He is proud to be part of a union that values respect and unity. He appreciates AMFA Members looking out for each another the way he was raised as a Hawaiian.
Watch Mike tell his story here:

AMFA Invites You and Your Family to Join Ours

You are voting now in what may be the most important election of your career. The union that represents you can make a real difference not only in your workplace, but also in the lives of you and your family.
AMFA wants the opportunity to stand with you and fight for you. As a Member-driven union, we are committed to:
• Achieving industry-leading wages
• Protecting your jobs where you currently work

• Using our proven negotiating strength to improve the quality of life for you and your family
Our history shows that when AMFA represents employees, we deliver real results — because we never forget who we’re fighting for. You.

Your Voice Matters at AMFA

AMFA operates like a family. We are a true democracy where every Member’s voice counts. Decisions are driven from the ground up, not handed down from the top. Your participation matters, and your vote is your voice.
Your ballot is confidential and secure — no one but you will know how you vote.

Mail Your Ballot Before the Deadline

Ballots will be counted by the National Mediation Board (NMB) in Washington, D.C. on February 12. To ensure your vote is counted, please mail your ballot no later than February 5. Please don’t wait.
This election is about your future, your workplace, and providing for the people who matter most — your family. We respectfully ask you to consider giving AMFA the opportunity to welcome you into our ‘ohana and fight for what you deserve.
Mahalo,
AMFA National
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Sharing with you guys at Alaska/Hawaiian that AMFA is opening up contract proposals to the membership for our up coming nego's to start. A reminder that AMFA takes in all proposals from the membership first and foremost. No other airline does this and follows thru with it to the end...

That time again. AMFA collecting contract proposals from the membership and NOT just going with what the International wants like the industrial unions all do. With AMFA it is total transparency, which is also why AMFA is the only Mechanics Class and Craft Union out there, and they allow the membership to attend and participate in nego's live at the table. No other union allows this, NONE. Just more and more reasons to go with AMFA representation for the Mechanics Class and Craft within the airline industry.
 

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