flybynite
Veteran
I would be cool if the former TWA f/a's got their DOH back.
AA has people furloughed that were hired before the most junior at LCC and AWA. DOH of hire would work just fine for them.
Not having a contract has nothing to do with qualifying for M-B. All it takes is different unions representing the two sides or one side not unionized.
That is the question. Personally, I don't think it affects the east/west FA seniority integration - despite not having a combined contract, unless I'm mistaken there legally is only one FA group at US, represented by the AFA through a single MEC, and that one group has a valid combined seniority list.
Jim
What is behind your obsession with the flight attendants' rejection of that piece-of-s**t tentative agreement? Ostensibly, you are a pilot, but you've left your stinky droppings all over the message threads concerned with flight attendant contract issues, and your commentary always involves some aspect of "you flight attendants are a bunch of ingrates and morons to reject what Sweet Daddy Doug and Senor Flores agreed upon for you." You've made your position abundantly clear, so let me make this likewise. The East and West flight attendants are overwhelming united in our determination to see through the passing of an improved, fair contract, and if you'd ever had to live with our current one, Mr. USA320 Pilot, you would understand that the recent proposal did not satisfy even that modest criteria. I don't think any of us who voted no (and as you know, seventy-five percent is overwhelming) have even a scintilla of regret in its summary rejection, and your constant, needling you'll-be-sorry posts only highlight how completely out of touch you are. Our vote was not predicated upon a fear that the sky might be falling, that tactic may have worked eight years ago (even longer, of course, in the West), but not this time. However this AA business plays itself out, I don't think a single one of us has any regret about the powerful message we sent to Parker & Co. Even if we did end up in a compromised position vis-a-vis seniority (which I do not believe, just more fear mongering from bitter, petty company flunkies), I will never regret casting my "HELL NO!" ballot, nor do I believe would any of my co-workers. At some point, we had to stop operating from a compromised position of fear and subjugation, and we've found that point. Most of us have anyway--may I suggest that you and the guy who claims to be losing a thousand dollars a months since the flight attendant tentative agreement was ousted undertake a private chat where you can try to outdo one another with florid praise for the Parker posse and snippy commentary about idiotic flight attendants not knowing what's best for them.
If AA and US flight attendants agree to DOH, then they will get DOH. M-B only applies if the two groups are unable to agree to a method for integrating seniority, if I remember correctly. Now it would be really interesting to see if DOH would revert the former TWA FAs at AA to their original DOH.
The US Airways and America West F/A's were represented by the same national union: AFA. They remain separate Locals today with separate contracts, equipment to fly, crew bases, and seniority lists. Even though the US Airways and America West MECs agreed upon a SLI, the seniority list has never been implemented as bound by the Transition Agreement because the majority of F/A's voted "no" on the TA.
Therefore, both F/A groups remain separate working on their current contracts with their current independent seniority lists.
Was there anything in the FA transition agreement about maintaining the two MEC's? Separate ratification votes on a joint contract or even something more specific concerning the MEC?
Jim
Was there anything in the FA transition agreement about maintaining the two MEC's? Separate ratification votes on a joint contract or even something more specific concerning the MEC?
Without trying to look it up, I think ALPA had something similiar in it's merger policy (but I could be wrong) but left the two MEC's since the transition agreement called for separate ratification votes. Of course, sometimes these policies are written for the best case situations when everything goes smoothly. I doubt that in 2005/2006 anyone from either side's pilots or FAs thought that in 2012 there still wouldn't be joint contracts and for the pilots even a resolved joint seniority list.
Jim
What is behind your obsession with the flight attendants' rejection of that piece-of-s**t tentative agreement? Ostensibly, you are a pilot, but you've left your stinky droppings all over the message threads concerned with flight attendant contract issues, and your commentary always involves some aspect of "you flight attendants are a bunch of ingrates and morons to reject what Sweet Daddy Doug and Senor Flores agreed upon for you." You've made your position abundantly clear, so let me make this likewise. The East and West flight attendants are overwhelming united in our determination to see through the passing of an improved, fair contract, and if you'd ever had to live with our current one, Mr. USA320 Pilot, you would understand that the recent proposal did not satisfy even that modest criteria. I don't think any of us who voted no (and as you know, seventy-five percent is overwhelming) have even a scintilla of regret in its summary rejection, and your constant, needling you'll-be-sorry posts only highlight how completely out of touch you are. Our vote was not predicated upon a fear that the sky might be falling, that tactic may have worked eight years ago (even longer, of course, in the West), but not this time. However this AA business plays itself out, I don't think a single one of us has any regret about the powerful message we sent to Parker & Co. Even if we did end up in a compromised position vis-a-vis seniority (which I do not believe, just more fear mongering from bitter, petty company flunkies), I will never regret casting my "HELL NO!" ballot, nor do I believe would any of my co-workers. At some point, we had to stop operating from a compromised position of fear and subjugation, and we've found that point. Most of us have anyway--may I suggest that you and the guy who claims to be losing a thousand dollars a months since the flight attendant tentative agreement was ousted undertake a private chat where you can try to outdo one another with florid praise for the Parker posse and snippy commentary about idiotic flight attendants not knowing what's best for them.
Sorry to quote you a second time but I think I have the answer.