WorldTraveler
Corn Field
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2003
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- 21,709
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good question but DL doesn't have a category so far as I know that is for non-DL employees working alongside DL employees. The WORK is outsourced or done at DL facilities.Does Delta consider Delta Global (A lot of Delta retirees) as part of their maintenance or is it considered outsourced/temp. labor??
And it wouldn't be terribly surprising if DL rehires some of the retirees that leave in the current retirement package back under DGS to alleviate the ramp up for new hire training.
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The vast majority (probably more than 95% of DL's domestic employees) work in its hubs so what happens in the hub is reflective of DL overall.
And if senior employees in small/medium stations are happy to stay where they are, and that is typical at many airlines, then why should RRs expect to make permanent there? Many senior employees put in their time at the hubs, moved around to find stability, and have earned the right to have schedule stability and a smaller workplace than those in the hubs (including a 5 minute walk from the parking lot instead of a 15 minute bus ride). And since many of the smaller and medium sized stations are in smaller cities than the hubs, many employees would see that as a higher quality of life - one which I believe is a decent reward for giving years to the company at big stations.
Let's not underestimate that many small and medium station employees are probably better at their jobs because they know all aspects of the operation where hub employees become specialists and might do one thing well - but they typically ONLY do one thing.
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Small stations are largely not growing because most carriers are at best holding onto their size in small cities as demand decreases with higher fuel prices. Whatever growth happens is new "spokes" at the hubs - and that is largely new int'l routes - and even that is harder and harder to justfy.... the DTW-Asia flying remains one of the biggest growth phases by DL post-merger and no other major carrier has added more than a route here or there.
Let's keep in mind that the industry is largely in a no-growth phase this year and there will likely be alot of capacity that will come out of the system before the year is over.
If anything, what the airlines that have successfully restructured have learned is that they must think alot further down the road than they did years ago - thus they are not making commitments that they cannot maintain in the face of the changing economics of the industry - changes which are not coming as a surprise.
That also means they are not making commitments to employees or salaries that they will later regret making.