I think AA is certain to bring replacement workers onto the property if TWU goes down the strike road, which is why I think it's crazy for AA's mechanics and other ground workers to consider a strike. The odds that they will be replaced are very high, as the recession left a large pool of unemployed and underemployed people to draw from.
Anyone know what percentage of striking NWA employees actually made it back to work when all was said and done?
And what do you base that on? The fact is that AA had planned to add 900 mechanics this year and they are having a hard time getting that. They've reached out to seven schools for mechanics just in order to keep up with attrition. The TWU and other unions are organizing the MROs but the MROs cant hold on to enough mechanics either. Its hard to organize a place when the workers keep leaving. Boeing has halted the 747 line just so their mechanics can catch up, they reportedly are 1100 jobs behind. AA has had 757s sitting out of service because they are falling behind despite record amounts of OT. All this OT has drawn the attention of the FAA who are considering reinterpreting the FARs and requiring more rest, but the airlines (and some of their pet unions) are squawking about it.
In 2005 there was without a doubt a surpluss of mechanics, despite that NWA had a hard time keeping their operation going, they slashed it by 20% and the company was bought out by Delta. In 2005 nearly every carrier had hundreds if not thousands of mechanics out on the street. Many have since been picked up by carriers like Jet Blue, 3P providers in lower cost parts of the country or other industries. They simply arent out there anymore. The only people that they will get are those who simply miss working on airplanes or want to work in a specific location, and most would not scab because they know that if they do they will never be forgiven and they would simply wait it out.
In 2011 there's a shortage of mechanics despite the high unemployment rate. Today the FAA issues less than half the certs they used to, not even 3000 last year, and 54% of our mechanics are over 50 years of age. If AA could take on a strike they would have let us go on strike when we asked to be released over a year ago. Why, becuase a year ago they had over 1000 mechanics on the recall list, now they have none, Ual is blowing through their list as well, with a 60% refusal rate, the rate usually increases because the further down you go the less seniority they have, meaning they probalbly have more time at their new employer than they did at the carrier.
The fact is that Airline Mechanics posess highly portable skills, and the airline industry isnt the only one having a hard time finding people with those skills.
A Wildcat Strike, by definition, is a strike that has not been authorized by the trade union to which the members belong. Basically we are going the way of Vietnam where nearly all strike are considered Wildcat strikes. Under the RLA we can not strike and the NMB will provide companies with endless delays which allow carriers to extract concessions through inflation (our dispatchers have been in negotiations since 2006). Over the years the NMB has steadily dragged out negotiations from an avereage of weeks to an average of years. Clearly this works to the benifit of the carriers and against workers. The only time the NMB will release workers in a matter of weeks is when the carrier has indicated that they have enough scabs to continue operations. We saked to be released over a year ago. We are no closer to a settlement now than we were then. In a GAO report it was cited that higher rates of service interruptions do seem to occur when negotiations drag on but with the data they had they could not be certian if it was the delay or weather that drove the interuptions.To me its clear, the government will side with the carrier in order to keep things moving, the carrier will simply wait things out as inflation continues to slash their workers pay and the only time either of them will move is when both those parties feel that this pressure has caused the Union to lose control over the workers and the workers Wildact in some form or another and cause massive disturbances to commerce. Its seems as if the government expects it, if the workers arent actually causing problems, in other words if they continue to obey the law, then the Economic need simply isnt there, they are happy enough, let inflation continue to slash their pay until they do.