AWA320
Veteran
This unedited and I have NO COMMENTARY, it is very compelling though!!!
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From ALPA Message Board ...
Subject: Alaska to merge with United
Author: XXXXXXXXX
Date: 05 Aug 2007 04:27 PM
Originally Posted: 05 Aug 2007 04:00 PM
>Alaska to
>merge with United.
>What merger policy would they use?
>
>ALPA’s EC is headed by "no decision†Prater while the
>airline industry continues its consolidation.
Dave-
I work for Delta so I don't have a dog in the USAir fight but I too am concerned about the actions of ALPA National on this issue.
I don't know if the "east" or the "west" is right about the merits of the Nic award but I am deeply troubled by the EC's apparent power to simply ignore their own policies and procedures.
Regardless of what they do now, Prater and the EC have demonstrated pretty clearly to the pilots of Delta, United, NWA and everybody else that the merger policy's "binding" arbitration is not quite as binding as we all thought. Evidently, an independent arbitrator's decision is always open to "further review" by ALPA politicians. If they don't like the decision they can always schedule special meetings, call for talks, issue high minded resolutions, appoint Blue Ribbon committees to study the matter, etc. etc. etc. - and basically override the process - forever if they choose.
ALPA has no merger policy. At least not one that anybody will ever respect again.
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From ALPA Message Board ...
Subject: Alaska to merge with United
Author: XXXXXXXXX
Date: 05 Aug 2007 04:27 PM
Originally Posted: 05 Aug 2007 04:00 PM
>Alaska to
>merge with United.
>What merger policy would they use?
>
>ALPA’s EC is headed by "no decision†Prater while the
>airline industry continues its consolidation.
Dave-
I work for Delta so I don't have a dog in the USAir fight but I too am concerned about the actions of ALPA National on this issue.
I don't know if the "east" or the "west" is right about the merits of the Nic award but I am deeply troubled by the EC's apparent power to simply ignore their own policies and procedures.
Regardless of what they do now, Prater and the EC have demonstrated pretty clearly to the pilots of Delta, United, NWA and everybody else that the merger policy's "binding" arbitration is not quite as binding as we all thought. Evidently, an independent arbitrator's decision is always open to "further review" by ALPA politicians. If they don't like the decision they can always schedule special meetings, call for talks, issue high minded resolutions, appoint Blue Ribbon committees to study the matter, etc. etc. etc. - and basically override the process - forever if they choose.
ALPA has no merger policy. At least not one that anybody will ever respect again.