Wretched Wrench
Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2003
- Messages
- 1,626
- Reaction score
- 12
It would not affect employee morale very much if furloughees were given passes lower than D2 status.
Light Years said:Thats terrible. It doesn't cost them anything. US furloughees (half the airline LOL) retain thier travel bennies the whole time they are furlughed, still completely free, still including parents, children, and spouse/domestic partner. They only lose buddy passes and frop down to a lower boarding priority under active employees.
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Former ModerAAtor said:It doesn't cost US anything because they're bankrupt and not paying most of their bills...
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TWskyliner said:That wasn't necessary.
Is it possible to maybe be less arrogant and openminded enough to consider steps that other airlines/companies take (that dont cost anything) to improve relationships with employee's? Oh I forget, that takes humility.
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It isn't done that way anymore. Furloughed employees are billed once a month, and if you don't pay up within a certain time, your pass priveleges are revoked.Former ModerAAtor said:There's also a cost associated with collecting the surcharges in advance, which you have to do with people not on payroll. That in itself costs us money thru increased agent transactions, refunds/adjustments, etc. 99% of the work for that is automated for employees on payroll.
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kirkpatrick said:It isn't done that way anymore. Furloughed employees are billed once a month, and if you don't pay up within a certain time, your pass priveleges are revoked.
MK
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TWAnr said:That procedure, by the way, is identical to the one used for collecting the travel surcharges from retired employees.
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Former ModerAAtor said:Yep, it is. And there's a cost involved with invoicing, so all this does is replace one expense with another.
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TWAnr said:I am sure that the invoicing cost was taken into account when the amounts of the surcharges were determined.
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Former ModerAAtor said:Perhaps, but surcharges were also calculated at $30 oil, and haven't been adjusted upward.
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Wretched Wrench said:Anybody got any figures on how much it costs per mile for an extra pound?
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Former ModerAAtor said:Depends on the fleet type...Â
IncrementalPayload * 0.1196 = IncrFuel on a MD80
IncrementalPayload * 0.25 = IncrFuel on a 777
If I'm reading the formula correctly, 200# of payload (average pax + carryon bag weight) equates to about 23# of fuel on a two hour MD80 flight, or 50# on a 8 hour flight with the 777.
With fuel @ $1.65/gal and 6.7# per gal, that works out to about $5 in fuel on a MD80 or $12 on the 777 flight.Â
Doesn't sound like a lot at the micro level, but aggregate that up to a flat $5 for every flight operated over the course of a year, and we're talking about $1.46M in added fuel alone....
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