Phoenix
Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2003
- Messages
- 8,584
- Reaction score
- 7,430
First, thanks for using the word "we" even though you did not vote for the MOU. You are one of the few participating CLT pilots in our union. And especially thanks for voting either way, it indeed was a very personal decision. If the POR is restructured, as you opine, would you rather go into new negotiations with the MOU or LOA 93 as our last bargaining product? Could we recapture the gains of the MOU in a new agreement, could we get improvements? Big maybe. But being an armchair member of the NAC I would sure as heck rather be in the room with the MOU looming than just taunts and bravado as to what we "deserve." The MOU set a benchmark for a point in time. Things may change, but in the end the MOU could at least be a reference point for “where we were.” RR
I really don't get the argument of false choice. Why do people fall for it.
Management has been acting like a slime bag for over a decade toward us, but negotiates three labor contracts with AMR employees in a matter of weeks, and even agrees to pay taxes for the $100K stake that the APA pilots get. I don't know what the he.l.l the APA had when it went into negotiations, but if anyone figures it out lets get some of that sh.i.t instead of fighting about choosing between having LOA93 or the MOU as a starting point.

The APA was/is in bankruptcy for crying out load, how much weaker a position can one hold? I am starting to think, as in most of life, one's external circumstances have far less to do with how a person/group acts than do the internal composition of said person or group. Its internal. The MOU LOA 93 stuff don't mean shiite to negotiations. IMHO. 🙂