The International is the one who created the idea of the seperate districts, and the seperate districts does not seperate the locals, I liked the idea of US Mechs and Related AGCs representing the M&R and not a fleet person or vice versa. The reps should be off the contract and property they represent.
The IAM M&R contract was amendable in 1995 and was not settled till 1999, the dates could become amendable together without having fleet swinging in the wind waiting. The company did not want to give you a fair agreement and stalled.
The strength in numbers does work, one contract time at TWA the company was offering the ramp, mechanic and related a sweetheart deal while screwing reservations and customer service. The three seperate negotiating committees met nightly and the other two groups would not accept thier offers till the company gave the agents a reasonable offer.
Look at NW, amfa only represents one group at NW and their strike did not cause the company to shutdown at all. If the IAM struck at NW, there would be no reservations, gate and ticket agents and no rampers or stock clerks, harder to replace three or four groups of workers then one.
M&R had a working relationship since 1949 with the company to achieve time off, and being a former prinicipal officer I can tell you I had a hard time getting time off, it was not a carte blanche policy. It was up to local management and when I went to stores I had to work in my time off of UB around other people's vacations, days off and comp days. And when I was working for the District and was assigned to another airline's negotations I had to get the GC and the DL President to step in and get me time off, I have seen many mechanic and related's time off for UB denied. The only time my UB time was granted without hesitation was for the bankruptcy negotiations.
You have to ask Randy Canale why he did not support you, and in CLT the Fleet Committee is basically full time and rarely work the ramp.
You can't solve the problems until a cure of membership apathy is found, and that problem has not been solved in any union anywhere.
If you have been to the Harbor you know during all the leadership classes members are charged with the trying to stop the membership apathy, and some of the students come up with good ideas, but you cant force a member to get involved, there is a big difference in being a union member then being a member of a union.
The IAM M&R contract was amendable in 1995 and was not settled till 1999, the dates could become amendable together without having fleet swinging in the wind waiting. The company did not want to give you a fair agreement and stalled.
The strength in numbers does work, one contract time at TWA the company was offering the ramp, mechanic and related a sweetheart deal while screwing reservations and customer service. The three seperate negotiating committees met nightly and the other two groups would not accept thier offers till the company gave the agents a reasonable offer.
Look at NW, amfa only represents one group at NW and their strike did not cause the company to shutdown at all. If the IAM struck at NW, there would be no reservations, gate and ticket agents and no rampers or stock clerks, harder to replace three or four groups of workers then one.
M&R had a working relationship since 1949 with the company to achieve time off, and being a former prinicipal officer I can tell you I had a hard time getting time off, it was not a carte blanche policy. It was up to local management and when I went to stores I had to work in my time off of UB around other people's vacations, days off and comp days. And when I was working for the District and was assigned to another airline's negotations I had to get the GC and the DL President to step in and get me time off, I have seen many mechanic and related's time off for UB denied. The only time my UB time was granted without hesitation was for the bankruptcy negotiations.
You have to ask Randy Canale why he did not support you, and in CLT the Fleet Committee is basically full time and rarely work the ramp.
You can't solve the problems until a cure of membership apathy is found, and that problem has not been solved in any union anywhere.
If you have been to the Harbor you know during all the leadership classes members are charged with the trying to stop the membership apathy, and some of the students come up with good ideas, but you cant force a member to get involved, there is a big difference in being a union member then being a member of a union.