Nancy, not sure what you mean, but we may be mixing two different concepts here. The vacation accrual will depend upon both company seniority AND hours flown. Sick leave accrual is the same for everyone based strictly upon hours flown.
On the vacation and the sick leave, the accrual is same for everyone who flies less than 540/yr (avg. 45/month) -- zero, none, nada, zilch. As it should be.
If you fly "normal hours"--540 to 739/yr (45-61.35/mo), you get the standard seniority-based vacation. In my case 14 days. If I flew 740-939/yr (61.40-78.15/mo), I would get an additional vacation day. If I flew 940/yr or more, I would get two additional vacation days. Which is not bad. 940 hours/yr is only 78 hours, 20 minutes a month, and they are talking about building lines up to 80 hours/mo as soon as the new contract is ratified. So, I would get 16 days vacation just for flying a "normal" line (assuming that I will ever hold a line again in this career). And, I would accrue 4 hours of sick leave each month, by flying a "normal" schedule.
My only question about that would be does that 940 mean actual hours aloft or does that include "guarantee" hours? Also, is that line or actual hours? Does time picked up during OSO or other delays count? For instance, over the course of the year, you hold lines which total 930 hours (avg. 77.30 month). However, due to OSO delays, you actually got paid for 950 hours over the course of the year. Do those hours count toward your 940 or not? I know that when counting toward 30-in-7 today, they only count hours aloft. Pay and credit hours do not count.
The sick leave doesn't matter that much to me, but I want those two extra vacation days.
The only addition I would have made to the contract if I were on the company side would be to include a provision that flight attendants would get paid lump sum cash for half their accrued sick leave upon retirement or departure from company employment. That would end (or, at least slow down) the practice of "burning" sick leave in prepararation for retirement. Don't misunderstand, I don't blame the flight attendants who do it. There are many who never abused their sick leave and have hundreds of hours in their bank. For them to get nothing in return for following the rules is unfair. Particularly, when there are flight attendants who get away with calling in sick because their nail appointment was changed to a day they were supposed to fly.
🙄
Oh, and don't forget as far as those 0-5 year people getting the shaft...remember until further notice there is no one even on the furlough list who has less than 9 years bidding or less than 5 or 6 years company seniority.