Some places there are. Other places hire an exec because "he did great in Telecom, let's let him run this waste disposal business". Failed miserably. Other places have boards who are very willing to "reward" the executive team for a "job well done" - and that well done job means that they lost less money than they did the year before. Also - SWA is unique because their execs pay is tied pretty much directly to performance. If salary alone were a factor, every exec at SWA could easily double their "guaranteed" income by moving to another company outside the airline industry.
As long as the execs are happy I say Mazel Tav.
And your union's leader is attempting to paint Mr. Parker as an overpaid, unfeeling executive. And I find that stance laughable.
Just like many people in this country were unhappy with President Bush before John Kerry became the presumptive democratic candidate...many flight attendants were unhappy with SWA before Thom McDaniel took the helm. Mr. Kerry's candidacy did not create the rancor some harbor towards Mr. Bush...he just gave that rancor a place to call home. Same goes for many of the flight attendants of SWA. It is easy to blame this on Thom McDaniel because is the chosen mouthpiece but those whose views he espouses felt as they do...long before he stepped into the spotlight. These negotiations have simply placed it all under a microscope. Thom's words express the sentiments of much of the membership, definitely not all but more than you'd think. Keep repeating that to yourself until it sinks in. We actually work for Jim....that is a very different experience and perspective than reading a piece in Forbes, a passage in "Nuts" or a blurb in USA Today. Whoever first said the grass always looks greener from the otherside of the fence sure said a mouthful.
No doubt Britanny can't sing, but she does have a nice ass. It's too bad you see "corporate cult". Perhaps more companies need some of this "cultishness".
To a point yes. I think the original idea of this airline bonding as a pseudo-family in the interest of a common goal was brilliant. Doubtless the bond the original employees formed helped them to overcome the tremendous obstacles that threatened to keep SWA from ever getting off the ground. Likewise, there is nothing wrong with taking care of your people. I've never been but I have to think that is Business School 101 that if you take care of your people...they will take care of you. But there comes a point where you cross the line into "groupthink" and that is a dangerous line to cross.
It's far better to have a job at a company that you want to go to work for.
Of course but there is a difference between enjoying where your work and becoming beholden to a company to the point of idolatry.
I have had times where it was tough to make those rent payments to the landlord myself. But your not homeless, so there must be enough in the bank to make the payment.
I am fortunate that I don't have the same level of responsibility that others do....no spouse...no kids....etc. I live simply and I have enough seniority that my pay rate is sufficient to make enough to keep the rent paid and the lights on. But, I live in an inexpensive part of the country...if I lived in one of our expensive east or west coast bases and or I had a family to support, I would have to make the difficult decision of either flying enough to support myself and my family or actually being home to see them or making enough to support myself in a base city or actually being home to enjoy the home I am flying to pay for. That is the damned if you do damned if you don't choice these folks are tired of having to make. Either fly 23-26 days a month and never see your home and family or not fly and not be able to afford that home or family. We understand the concept of paying dues but having to still make that agonizing choice after 10 or 12 years of service is tough to swallow when your work for a company that enjoys the kind of financial success that Southwest has.
There may be 7,000 FA's who feel like it's a cult...that the culture is nothing more than corporate kool-aid. I'd submit to you that there are 70,000 others who have to-mah-toed and to-may-toed enough that they'd gladly trade places.
It is not all 7,000 flight attendants. The union leadership has the majority behind them but it is not unanimous...not even close..that is why Jim Parker is pushing so hard for a vote...all he needs is 50 percent just one...he is rolling the dice that the numbers tilt in his favor. Also, it has been pointed out that in past years the mechanics and ramp agents have also had acrimonious negotiations with the company. One could gather that this sense of discontent with the status quo at SWA exists beyond the flight attendant ranks. We just happen to be the malcontents du jour.
It's called "the grass is always greener" syndrome. Trouble with your attitude is that you believe the grass ain't any greener over here, so you're willing to have the company stop the weed-n-feeding on your side of the fence and let the hogweed infiltrate your field.
Not really. The way I see it, we, the labor groups of SWA are like different varieties of vegetables in a farmer's garden. You've got the corn, tomatoes, peas, and carrots...(ramp, ops, customer service, flight ops, etc.) and they have all gotten their fair share of the Miracle-Gro(12 year top outs, pay raises, etc.) But when it came time to water the broccoli (Inflight Service)Farmer Brown said..."Sorry, I'm almost all out of Miracle-Gro. I know the other veggies got their fair share but there just isn't much left...you'll have to make do with what's left at the bottom of the bottle. I know it's not much and the others got more but it's all I've got, it's better than nothing and I never really liked broccoli anway."
"Substandard wages" is subjective.
Of course. But who is in this particular instance is in a better position to
quantify "substandard"...someone who has busted his or her tail schlepping drinks on 28 minute flights, collecting barf bags, and just generally being there "just in case" the @#$% hits the fan at SWA's behest or someone who hasn't ?
To a person making $10 an hour, paying a couple hundred dollars a month for insurance and working out of fear rather than any sense of loyalty to a company, a starting wage of $15 an hour, with a $2 per diem and fantastic benefits as far from being "whored out". When they look at the wage progression that has been offered - they'd wonder how ANYBODY could believe that they were being "used".
I'd love to have a chit chat with them after the sheen wears off their shiny new wings and they are still making less than even the other LCCs and they still don't have parity with the other unions at their airline. $15 a trip is great unless you get based in Oakland and until you realize that jetBlue starts at $20. A 15 year top out is fantastic until it dawns on you that the mechanic who fixes your plane, the pilot who flies it, the provisioner who stocks it, and the ramp agent who loads it all topped in 12. Jim Parker is not the devil...the devil is in the details and you have to actually work under a collective bargaining agreement to see where the holes are.
I don't know exactly where you live, but I have friends here who were laid off from a job paying $60,000 per year having to take jobs stocking a grocery store. They don't feel that they are "whoring themselves out"...they call it "survival".
Taking any honest job you can get to put food on the table is admirable. Failing to stand up for the contribution you make to the success of a company is not.
Everyone is so busy being offended by the way the flight attendants have gone about asking for their raise and horrified that they would have the nerve to ask for one in the first place they never stopped to think if SWA could actually afford the raise.