If you are listed and checked in for the first flight of the day and you don't get on and you have presented yourself in person at the gate podium, you are automatically rolled over to the standby list for the next flight.
The way I understood it, yes, this works if we are in the same city pair. Say you are trying to get from BOS to LAX and list through PHX. Now either you dont get on or the flight has a mechanical and you will misconnect. If you go over to the LAS connection that leaves an hour later, you are now on the bottom of the list. THIS people think is a GOOD PLAN?
Also, I understand that the company is cracking down on "non-rev" abuse--such as listing oneself on multiple flights--because it messes up load estimates, etc. It is technically a violation of corporate travel policy to multi-list.
If it works like I think it does, you HAVE to check in for multiple flights or you will fall into the scenario I described above. PLEASE, if Im wrong in this, correct me.
This is why seniorty is much more fair but wont be the policy selected because it isnt the way HP did it in the past.
1. Say you are a f/a or pilot, and you are non-revving home at the end of your sequence, but you will be in the air when the 4-hour window for check-in is reached; so, you have someone else sign on to the computer with your id and password and check you in for the flight.
Again, this is FAIR? You are working so you cant comply with the 4 hour rule so tough luck? Bottom of the list.
:-(