Technicality... Deregulation was in 1979 -- I don't think the average age of Americans is 29 just yet... nor do I think the average age of the flying public is under 30.
But the rest of your comments are spot on. A lot of the people here bemoaning how bad it also never worked for an airline during the CAB days.
I have no doubt that the legacies know how they'd like to compete, but the real challenge has been finding ways to do so within the confines of workrules and contractual clauses that are 20 and 30 years old.
It took the industry 15 years to eliminate paper tickets, so perhaps there's hope for workrule reform... I'm just not holding out much hope for it at the legacies.
Since the 2003 AA home invasion of my home:
1) we have consistently exposed what AA is allowed versus what they have done with respect to the contract;
2) we have provided hundreds of millions of dollars in cost reductions;
3) we have provided hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue.
M&E/TWU is not the f'ing problem. Give us the same percentage bonus with respect to Senior Management or shut it down. Both FWAA and eolesen initially decried any outrage against the KERP/SERP/FURP program as insignificant.
During the '03 fiasco, we asked the TWU to look at a proposal for integration of AE into AA with all of the MD-80 fleet and that portion of all AA employees' moving down into the top AE tier for the job code and all bonuses and stock options being directed only towards that group: to this day, the TWU refuses to acknowledge their failure on the forward look. Today we are faced with a "negative hedge" against fuel prices in the sense that we must recieve the difference between the mortgaged value of a monthly payment on the fleet versus gross revenue generated from flight operations for that fleet.
During the Pension Debacle, we questioned the state of funding for AMR DBP Pensions: only to be told that those were not in question, only to learn that not only were they in question but were Federally Protected from questioning. After FWAA and eolesen initally discounted the problems within the system, they adopted the mantra of a DBP being less expensive than a DCP. Still lacking is the wedge between what AMR regards as a funding level and what the PBGC regards as a funding level. To date the TWU and AMR have refused to request such an audit by the PBGC of the funding status of the Defined Benefit Plans for ANY GROUP TO WHICH AMR IS OBLIGATED.
During the Discussion of Contractual Negotiations for TWU M&E, we posited that any contractual language be secured by BK proof EETCs against aircraft delivered during the period covered by the contract and subject to abatement over the period of the value of contractual terms versus the value of the aircraft as delivered.
We are where we are: It Is What It Is.
Some 60 737-800 are being delivered during 2008 and 2009.
The Majority of Aircraft on the property have notes due in 2010.
Given the current fuel prices and cash draw, some expect that AMR will file in 2009 for protection in bankruptcy.
Refuse any CBA that fails to specifically cite the finacial circumstances for the company and the promises to the union based upon those circumstances.