For an A-300, dunno, probably a LOT less.
A-300 B-ck -around 45 guys. Widebodies use more guys. Thats one of the points I've been trying to make when AA and some in the TWU try to compare our headcount to SWA.
Recently the company has also been comparing our present headcount to what it was in 1992, when we had the same number of aircraft, what they dont mention is that the ratio of widebody to narrowbody has reveresed and we have more widebodies now than we did then. Widebodies use more heads.
In 2005 the company had nearly 300 names on the recall list for NY1(EWR,LGA,JFK) from what I've heard only one in 20 accepted recall. When I spoke to a few who did come back none of them said settle for less in order to save jobs. So in other words 95% found something better.
With a 95% rate of permanent loss furloughs of trained workers is much less appealing. The costs of retraining and the lag in returning to full productivity is costly. I would estimate that it costs the company at least $50,000 to train a line mechanic. Figure just the Gen-Fams alone costs around $20k. Then all the other stuff, OSHA, Equipment, Safety,CBT etc etc, it adds up quickly. Then when you take in a new hire thats unfamiliar with the proceedures that also has a cost factor. You have to figure that the first time you do a job it takes twice as long as it does the next time you do it.
The way I see it once the economy recovers there will be a serious shortage of mechanics. Only one in twenty came back, more than half the A&P schools in the country closed their doors over the last five years, and competing parts of the industry pay either more or just as much as the airlines are offering, never mind the fact that competing industries offer more pay, better benifits and more security. The likelyhood of getting young blood is slim. The average age in our Local is 46 years old. Too old to leave, but old enough to no longer be intimidated by threats either.
If the offer thats on the table goes through the guys in high cost areas are screwed. By 2011 we will be at the bottom of the industry in everything-pay, benifits, vacation, sick time, holiday pay. Behind even non-union workers. We will not be lagging by pennies, but tens of thousands of dollars a year. We will be at the bottom in an industry that has as a whole already sunk to historic lows as far as compensation-lower than whale shyte.
We will have few choices. Either pack it in, leave and try and start over as we are approaching our retirement planning years, or screw up the operation so bad that they have to move all the work to low cost areas, even if it costs them more to do so, we would have to make it too costly for them to keep us here, this would create openings so we could transfer to low cost areas and improve our situation that way, or screw up the operation so bad that they abandon those markets entirely (and search for all those premium dollar passengers that fly from Tulsa to DFW) and apply to the carriers that move in to fill the void.
The offer thats on the table is so bad we really wouldnt have a future with American Airlines in a high cost area. Thats my personal opinion anyhow.