Wow. With Nicolau, where would that leave you? On furlough yet again??
What
will be interesting is how the Nicolau award will affect the UAL pilots in any upcoming merger.
The ALPA merger policy was changed to remove the importance of date-of-hire in 1991, and rumor has it that this change was at the behest of the UAL pilots and their representatives. Then, UAL hired like mad for years after that, and enjoyed years of quick movement up the list.
But remember, that was almost
17 years ago. One would expect -- and I don't know, but would welcome the info from any UAL types monitoring this frequency -- what your average garden variety 17-year pilot at UAL can hold as far as seat, equipment, and domicile, but I would expect they are reasonably far up the food chain by now.
So let's say that UAL merges with another ALPA airline. The pilot seniority fight will go to arbitration. (It always does.) But
now the most recent iteration of "ALPA Merger Policy" is the Nicolau award. We know that ol' George is off the list of potential arbitrators, but what is the next arbitrator going to do? Use the most recent arbitrations as a template. And two of the most recent arbitrations among ALPA carriers are... US Airways/America West and US Airways/US Airways Shuttle.
Both done by George Niclolau. Both done the same way. By slotting. (Because US Airways had retired its last 727, and had no more flight engineers, The US Shuttle flight engineers were treated the same way as the furloughed pilots at US Airways in the AWA merger. They were stapled. So in siding with Nicolau, in his zeal to screw the US East pilots, the UAL pilot neutral essentially threw his own furloughed fellow UAL pilots under the bus in any upcoming merger.)
So the 17-year UAL captain could very well see a pilot from a younger, smaller airline leapfrog him or her in seniority, if Nicolau is used as the template. Even if UAL and the combined USA/AWA merge, while the UAL pilots might delight in seeing the US East pilots not get DOH seniority, they may also find themselves looking
up at a US West pilot who was hired
after they were.
It seems pretty obvious that ALPA merger policy eliminated DOH as a defense against the old fart pilots of USAir and TWA. (Pan Am and Eastern were already gone by then.) In that same vein of one-way thinking, the French built the Maginot Line facing Germany, to defend themselves against that one enemy.
But just as the Germans eventually entered France through Belgium and the Netherlands -- and by flying airplanes
over the Maginot Line and dropping paratroopers behind it -- so might the 1991 ALPA merger policy prove to be an obsolete defense of the seniority of the UAL pilots.