Well, then provide the facts please. If I am mistaken or misinformed, it's not sadly. ?
Potomac already had its own certificate using former Allegheny Dash 8s until it would become DCAir. I don't remember PSA having any involvement with Potomac other than both being wholly owneds.
Are you saying United AFA did not/does not have such a scope clause, or that it doesn't have anything to do with Air Wisconsin?
Be a share bear with your happily informed info please. While we're waiting, here's some reading material.
United attendants vote to OK strikes
Chicago Sun-Times, Apr 4, 2001 by FRANCINE KNOWLES
United Airlines' flight attendants have voted overwhelmingly to authorize targeted strikes if the world's largest airline proceeds with its planned merger with US Airways Group.
Those strikes could begin as early as mid-May, impacting travelers' Memorial Day plans, the Association of Flight Attendants warned Tuesday at a press conference at O'Hare Airport. Members sported T-shirts and pickets with the acronym CHAOS, which stands for Create Havoc Around Our System-the name for the union's campaign of targetd strikes.
The union, which is seeking a pay increase, says a merger would be an illegal change to its contract if it proceeds without a waiver and would free the union to strike immediately.
But United countered that to prevent flight disruptions it will take any legal and disciplinary actions necessary. Further, United said such strikes would be illegal and jeopardize flight attendants' careers.
The union, which represents 26,000 United Airlines flight attendants, said 97 percent of those casting ballots voted to authorize strikes. Seventy-two percent of eligible members cast ballots.
"The flight attendants have voted to uphold our contract and protect our careers," said AFA Master Executive Council President Linda Farrow. "If United illegally moves forward with its merger transaction, we will strike."
The union contract requires that any carrier that United owns and operates must be flown with flight attendants on the United flight attendant seniority list. Under the United flight attendant contract, that necessitates a contract amendment, the union contends.
But United argues the union is refusing to cooperate on the process and timing of integating seniority lists from United and US Airways as required under the contract. It contends the union is using the list issue to try to gain leverage in wage talks.
United sent letters to flight attendants last month, seeking to make its case and warn attendants against engaging in illegal job actions.
The flight attendants are in the fifth year of a 10-year contract with the airline. That contract allows negotiations on wages midway through its duration.
The union is seeking pay increases ranging from 13 percent to 30 percent for domestic flight attendants and between 7 percent and 34 percent for international.
But the company says United flight attendants already lead the industry in overall compensation. United also argues that because the flight attendants did not take rate cuts in exchange for participation in the company's employee stock ownership plan, pay restoration is not a consideration as it was in the case of United's pilots.
Last year, United's pilots approved a four-year contract that gave them raises of 21.5 percent to 28.5 percent, plus 4 percent annual increases.
"The AFA announcement today is an inappropriate attempt at a mid- contract pay raise by threatening actions that the AFA knows very well it is not entitled to initiate under the law," Bill Hobgood, a United senior vice president, said in a statement. "United is not going to be coerced in this way."
But the union contends it has an arbitration decision in its favor stemming from United's acquisition of Air Wisconsin. The union said the company's position in that situation was that it could buy and operate Air Wisconsin separately. The union disagreed.
United says the arbitration decision doesn't bolster the union's argument.
"The current situation is exactly the opposite of the Air Wisconsin contract arbitration case," the company said in a statement. "In the Air Wisconsin case, AFA successfully insisted that the United Airlines and Air Wisconsin flight attendant groups be merged under AFA merger policy. In the present case, AFA refuses to do precisely what it insisted should be done in the Air Wisconsin case."
LABOR PROVISION VIOLATION WILL COST UNITED $8.9 MILLION
By EDWARD WONG (NYT)
Published: May 7, 2002
An arbitrator has ruled that United Airlines, part of UAL, must pay flight attendants $8.9 million for violating the terms of a labor contract by employing attendants from Air Wisconsin after acquiring that airline, a union spokeswoman said yesterday. United bought Air Wisconsin in 1992 and operated it as a separate carrier, using Air Wisconsin's attendants rather than United's. The arbitrator ruled on April 27 that the move violated a labor agreement requiring United to use flight attendants from a seniority list. ''It really sends a message that the flight attendants stand behind their contract,'' said Dawn Deeks, a spokeswoman for the Association of Flight Attendants. The $8.9 million will be split among attendants employed in 1992 and 1993, she said. A United spokesman said the airline had no comment. Air Wisconsin is now privately held, though it remains a feeder carrier for United. Edward Wong (NYT)
BUSINESS/FINANCIAL DESK
United Might Sell 3 Carriers As Part of US Airways Deal
By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN
United Airlines is negotiating to sell three regional airlines now owned by US Airways to Atlantic Coast Airlines, one of United's largest commuter carriers, several people close to the talks said yesterday.
The discussions still could fail, one person said, but a second person said there might be an announcement as early as this week, though a price was still being negotiated. ''The feeling was that they were getting pretty close at the end of last week,'' this person said.