4A Mechanic
Member
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2012
- Messages
- 91
- Reaction score
- 62
+1
No it wasn't fear it was a choice between two different options I and many others liked option B better than option A.
How do you know it worked? There is nothing stopping the company from coming back for more.so I could get a 6 year contract & apparently it worked, come back in 6 years & try again, basically I compared the term sheet to this last contract & made a choice. ;-)
So have I and so will I..
But when people are conditioned for years, even decades, into either not doing something or doing something, they are going to have a harder time adjusting. Especially if they are older and set in their ways. And they will get sent to a class here and there and when they can't perform like seasoned avionics mechanics, well, you know what's gonna happen.........
Maybe if our union long ago encouraged mechanics to "do it all" with no restrictions in past contracts, we could've UPPED our worth way back when.
And we have Avionics guys in the shop that can only change light bulbs and can't read wiring diagrams and can't troubleshoot.
Union job! Out in the real world guys like that get weeded out.
Tulsa is on borrowed time. In-house overhaul is on borrowed time. I'm not hating on the Tulsa guys, I was one of them at one time. I left Tulsa for the line 26 years ago but the sad fact of the matter is the airline industry is changing and with the evolution of these MRO's in-house overhaul will some day probably sooner the later be a thing of the past and at some point a little further down the line the line maintenance will probably be contracted out as well. The Class II's will be on the chopping block next go around. They can't get rid of in-house overhaul overnight. It takes time to change the way they've been doing buisness for what 40-50 years. They take a chunk of it now, they may take a another chunk of it in 3 years in exchange for some wage increases and some of those work rules, sick days, etc back but slowly but surely they'll get out of overhaul. One only needs to look at the rest of the industry to see the reality of that happening. Manipulating us into giving up system protection is the tip of the iceberg. The door's propped open now. Yes vote, no vote doesn't matter cause the end result will be the same. The big picture is getting rid of all of us. The younger guys should be thinking about a career change and hopfully we still have a few years left before it all goes away for us older guys to reach retirement age. It'll get to a point if you want to be an aircraft mechanic working on airliners you'll be working for an MRO or contract maintenance provider. I hope I'm wrong!
So tell me whats not written?
You cant can you. Typical TWU.
Move on and continue to get screwed.
I didnt vote yes on this POS deal, so don't make it sound like all of us voted for it. Some of us actually care about how things have transpired and it sucks for all. Dont forget about the lazy asses that didnt think it was important enough to even vote and the line guys that voted yes. There seems to be plenty of blame to go around on the yes vote, but its not on all the guys in Tulsa. The most blame, i agree. Whats done is done and we can't change that now, unfortunately!
One thing that isn't written is Local Overtime Procedures, but then again they are always negotiated after DOS because they are not in the Contract anyway.
Nice picture of you on your avatar.You still look the same after all these years, you haven't aged a bit. You really should go get a plastectomy though before our insurance changes, you know that piece of Plexiglas put in your lower back so when you're wearing your colon mask you can see where you are going.
http://www.tulsaworl...E1_CUTLIN161530
Oh Hewitt forgot to mention during his meetings that there was AMTs that could bump into Tulsa. But now he remembers.