Unions Differ On Rules For Defining Seniority
The issue of measuring
and applying seniority rules may be enough for beleaguered US
Airways pilots to pull out from the Air Line Pilots Association,
Int'l in favor of an in-house union, the US Airline Pilots
Association.
As ANN has reported, problems
started when US Airways and America West merged in 2005. Bickering
between both sides over a single contract and merging seniority
lists began almost immediately.
A federal arbitrator presented a seniority formula in June that
bases pilot ratings on aircraft type, with pilots ranked by
seniority within each group based on their time at their respective
airline, and how many aircraft of that type are within the combined
US Airways fleet.
Under the proposal, the top 517 pilots come from US Airways...
but the trouble lies at the next level, when talking about first
officer rankings. Some 1,000 US Airways first officers stand little
chance of ever making captain under the proposal, as the current
Age 60 rule would force them to retire before any left seats open
up.
This resulted in a lawsuit being filed by US Airways pilots
seeking to have the arbitrator's plan discarded. Both the US
Airways and America West pilot groups are represented by the
ALPA.

Now, apparently, there has been another blow to the US Airways
pilots. USAPA announced Tuesday that Paul Rice, ALPA executive vice
president and attorney Bruce York, ALPA's director of
representation, told US Airways pilot negotiators previous promises
of protections for the original US Airways pilots were "off the
table."
According to the budding union, a written report stated the
national association insists on, "a transition to
implementation..." The report went on to state that, "It appears
also that their desire is to have this transition occur in a fairly
short time frame (1-2 years...)"
"It goes without saying the east US Airways pilots will not
participate in the "implementation" of this deeply flawed "award"
in any way shape or form. The seeds of this "tortured logic"
arbitration decision were sewn in 1991 by a decision to strip
date-of-hire from ALPA merger policy," said the USAPA.
USAPA held information
sessions last week at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport, US
Airways' largest hub, reported The Street. A consistent flow of
pilots interested in further information stopped at the union's
booth to talk, read literature and even sign union authorization
cards.
According to Mark Thorpe, USAPA interim vice president, roughly
2,300 signatures have been collected to request a representation
election from the National Mediation Board. Several hundred more
need to be gathered before submission, he said.
The NMB could call a representation election if it determines
the collected signatures represent more than half of the bargaining
unit, reported The Street.
The ALPA has "too many constituencies to faithfully represent
(US Airways) pilots," says Stephen Bradford, interim president of
USAPA. "We will not put our futures in the hands of others whose
interests may not be aligned with ours."
There are critics, who don't think separating from one union to
go to another will solve anything. John McIlvenna, chairman of the
America West ALPA chapter, said he couldn't say of a new union
would represent both US Airways and America West pilots, but, even
if it did, he says, "They would still have the same mess they have
now."
ALPA spokesperson Pete Janhunen says the ALPA's executive
council has yet to approve the ruling and if it is approved, it
couldn't become effective until a single contract is in place.
McIlvenna says he believes the best way to go is to let contract
negotiations run their course. Talks are set to resume September 24
and there could very well be a deal by the end of this year, he
said.