Speaking of math not adding up, where did you get the 2-3% of costs from?Flyingsquirrelsuck wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 9:47 amYour buying into the lies. If you really researched the numbers there is no way the pilots would cost an increase of 85%! What do we cost the company now? It’s between 2-3% of yearly costs.tbaylx wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 2:33 amYou can't see why wiping out 85% of a company's profits to placate one single employee group is a problem?BE02 Driver wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 8:06 pm Legitimate question...
Quote as posted on wjpilotfacts.com:
"Over a five-year term, the increase in costs to the Company of the MEC’s current proposal represents approximately 85 per cent of WestJet’s total net earnings over the last five years. It would largely wipe all profits going forward and make WestJet unable to continue operations."
So unless I'm not understanding something here, WJ is claiming that if they were reduced to 15% of current profits over the next 5 years they would have to cease operations?
Why would a profitable company have to cease operations?
Dividend cuts, stock price drop, inability to raise financing for future growth and expansion are a few that jump out immediately.
If 85% is accurate someone should have asked ALPA to do a cost analysis before coming up with a proposal and setting up unrealistic expectations within the pilot group. There's the MEC's next challenge, selling the eventual contract to a group that they've riled up.
In saying that, the math doesn’t add up. I get it, your not an ALPA supporter, but it’s your responsibility to find out the truth. Call CAM, ask him about his math. It’s lies to divide the group. Simple
Vote results.
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Re: Vote results.
Re: Vote results.
For WestJet, that number is about 6% of costs for pilot compensation. Total corporate employee compensation bill is about 25% of total costs (varies mainly with fuel expanding or contracting it's portion).Maurice wrote: ↑Sun May 13, 2018 12:44 pmSpeaking of math not adding up, where did you get the 2-3% of costs from?Flyingsquirrelsuck wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 9:47 amYour buying into the lies. If you really researched the numbers there is no way the pilots would cost an increase of 85%! What do we cost the company now? It’s between 2-3% of yearly costs.tbaylx wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 2:33 am
You can't see why wiping out 85% of a company's profits to placate one single employee group is a problem?
Dividend cuts, stock price drop, inability to raise financing for future growth and expansion are a few that jump out immediately.
If 85% is accurate someone should have asked ALPA to do a cost analysis before coming up with a proposal and setting up unrealistic expectations within the pilot group. There's the MEC's next challenge, selling the eventual contract to a group that they've riled up.
In saying that, the math doesn’t add up. I get it, your not an ALPA supporter, but it’s your responsibility to find out the truth. Call CAM, ask him about his math. It’s lies to divide the group. Simple
- schnitzel2k3
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Re: Vote results.
60% of the time people bull$hiting works everytime. That especially includes WS management.Maurice wrote: ↑Sun May 13, 2018 12:44 pmSpeaking of math not adding up, where did you get the 2-3% of costs from?Flyingsquirrelsuck wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 9:47 amYour buying into the lies. If you really researched the numbers there is no way the pilots would cost an increase of 85%! What do we cost the company now? It’s between 2-3% of yearly costs.tbaylx wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 2:33 am
You can't see why wiping out 85% of a company's profits to placate one single employee group is a problem?
Dividend cuts, stock price drop, inability to raise financing for future growth and expansion are a few that jump out immediately.
If 85% is accurate someone should have asked ALPA to do a cost analysis before coming up with a proposal and setting up unrealistic expectations within the pilot group. There's the MEC's next challenge, selling the eventual contract to a group that they've riled up.
In saying that, the math doesn’t add up. I get it, your not an ALPA supporter, but it’s your responsibility to find out the truth. Call CAM, ask him about his math. It’s lies to divide the group. Simple
I think someone threw that out a few months ago in an angry WS thread to justify their position in an argument.
Now it's 'fact'.
Good luck guys with arranging the agreement you deserve. No sarcasm.
S.
Re: Vote results.
Aviation is strewn with the corpses of airlines that unions bankrupted.
- Boreas
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Re: Vote results.
Try again. Aviation is strewn with the corpses of airlines that executives and CEOs have bankrupted. Unions don't make financial or network decisions and most certainly don't control all the expenditures. Supposedly smart people with fancy titles do that.
Just one example would be Delta through the 90s and 2000s, the book Airline Without a Pilot by Harry L. Nolan is a concise and interesting read.
https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/ho ... =&sortKey=
- complexintentions
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Re: Vote results.
So unions are a symptom of corporate dysfunction, not the cause.
Hmm. Not exactly a huge improvement over Zaibatsu's comment, if you're hoping for a positive outcome to this whole mess and think unionization will be your salvation.
Hmm. Not exactly a huge improvement over Zaibatsu's comment, if you're hoping for a positive outcome to this whole mess and think unionization will be your salvation.
I’m still waiting for my white male privilege membership card. Must have gotten lost in the mail.
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Re: Vote results.
Unionization was a precursor for unity within the WestJet Pilot group. If you don’t see that then you have not spoken to a WestJet pilot recently.complexintentions wrote: ↑Mon May 14, 2018 6:24 pm So unions are a symptom of corporate dysfunction, not the cause.
Hmm. Not exactly a huge improvement over Zaibatsu's comment, if you're hoping for a positive outcome to this whole mess and think unionization will be your salvation.
Cheers
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Re: Vote results.
This article seems to fairly reflect how a lot of WestJet pilots are feeling.
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/www.thestar ... -ride.html
AltaCorp Capital’s Chris Murray — who recently downgraded his rating of the company to underperform — said WestJet management’s plan to use an outside provider to staff its new, ultra-low-fare carrier Swoop is an “egregious shot across the bow” of its nascent pilots’ union that thumbs its nose at labour law and is almost certain to fail.
When the pilots were represented by an employee association, WestJet had agreed they would fly all of the company’s flights, Murray said in an interview with the Star.
“But now that they want to unionize, they’ve said, ‘No that’s not the case and we’re going to hire third-party pilots at a different set of wage rates,’” he said.
“A lot of the pilots are saying, ‘Hang on! You’re actually displacing WestJet routes and using WestJet planes, so tell me how you’re not outsourcing my job.’”
When I say ‘fairly reflect’, the comments from most WestJet pilots are a lot stronger than ‘hang on’.
WestJet Flying WestJet Pilots
The airplanes literally still belong to WestJet an Alberta Partnership yet they are outsourcing the pilots.
Que the shame bell from game of thrones!
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/www.thestar ... -ride.html
AltaCorp Capital’s Chris Murray — who recently downgraded his rating of the company to underperform — said WestJet management’s plan to use an outside provider to staff its new, ultra-low-fare carrier Swoop is an “egregious shot across the bow” of its nascent pilots’ union that thumbs its nose at labour law and is almost certain to fail.
When the pilots were represented by an employee association, WestJet had agreed they would fly all of the company’s flights, Murray said in an interview with the Star.
“But now that they want to unionize, they’ve said, ‘No that’s not the case and we’re going to hire third-party pilots at a different set of wage rates,’” he said.
“A lot of the pilots are saying, ‘Hang on! You’re actually displacing WestJet routes and using WestJet planes, so tell me how you’re not outsourcing my job.’”
When I say ‘fairly reflect’, the comments from most WestJet pilots are a lot stronger than ‘hang on’.
WestJet Flying WestJet Pilots
The airplanes literally still belong to WestJet an Alberta Partnership yet they are outsourcing the pilots.
Que the shame bell from game of thrones!
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Re: Vote results.
Zaibatsu isn't wrong - one example is Sabena.
They were on the verge of bankruptcy and there was a rescue plan in place - but it meant a 30% wage cut across the board.
The Pilot's Union publicly stated that they'd rather see the doors close than accept a single penny in cuts (I saw it happen live on TV) - then they went on strike.
The doors closed and everyone lost their job.
Interesting sidenote:- All the leaders in the Pilots Union have been blacklisted in Belgium - no company will hire them. My Belgian colleagues have confirmed this is true.
They were on the verge of bankruptcy and there was a rescue plan in place - but it meant a 30% wage cut across the board.
The Pilot's Union publicly stated that they'd rather see the doors close than accept a single penny in cuts (I saw it happen live on TV) - then they went on strike.
The doors closed and everyone lost their job.
Interesting sidenote:- All the leaders in the Pilots Union have been blacklisted in Belgium - no company will hire them. My Belgian colleagues have confirmed this is true.
Always fly a stable approach - it's the only stability you'll find in this business
- Boreas
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Re: Vote results.
The Europeans know how to get it done!
It seems like the Lufty guys go on strike every other year.
Now who wouldn't want to see some WestJet executive get torn apart as they're climbing over a fence?
Not very Canadian... but still.
It seems like the Lufty guys go on strike every other year.
Now who wouldn't want to see some WestJet executive get torn apart as they're climbing over a fence?
Not very Canadian... but still.
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Re: Vote results.
Your comparing apples to oranges. Let’s see an example of a company with the financial health of Westjet, when the union took down the shipEric Janson wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 1:23 am Zaibatsu isn't wrong - one example is Sabena.
They were on the verge of bankruptcy and there was a rescue plan in place - but it meant a 30% wage cut across the board.
The Pilot's Union publicly stated that they'd rather see the doors close than accept a single penny in cuts (I saw it happen live on TV) - then they went on strike.
The doors closed and everyone lost their job.
Interesting sidenote:- All the leaders in the Pilots Union have been blacklisted in Belgium - no company will hire them. My Belgian colleagues have confirmed this is true.
Re: Vote results.
SABENA? Taken down by the Pilots' union?
Not to mention the Bankruptcy was in NOVEMBER 2001. Wasn't there something else that came just before that, that decimated our industry?
Looks like it's mismanagement, poor decisions, and bad deals done between CEOs and politicians that brought it to the precipice...The reasons for SABENA's bankruptcy are numerous. One of the direct causes was Swissair not living up to its contractual obligations and failing to inject necessary funds into the company. This was because at the time Swissair was having its own financial problems. During the so-called "Hotel agreement", signed on July 17, 2001, Belgian prime minister Guy Verhofstadt met with Swissair boss Mario Corti, who agreed to inject €258 million into Sabena. Mr Corti had made a terrible mistake as the sum was never paid, due to Swissair's own financial problems. The purchase of 34 new Airbus A320 family aircraft, imposed under Swissair's management, was a burden Sabena could not cope with.
After the bankruptcy, a parliamentary commission in Belgium was established to investigate the demise of the airline. The Belgian politicians got a part of the blame; Rik Daems, who, at the time, was Minister of Public Enterprises and Participations, Telecommunication and Middle Classes, received most criticism due to his lack of effort. Swissair itself went bankrupt in October of that year.
Not to mention the Bankruptcy was in NOVEMBER 2001. Wasn't there something else that came just before that, that decimated our industry?
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Re: Vote results.
I'm not denying that the Airline was close to bankruptcy.altiplano wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 6:39 am SABENA? Taken down by the Pilots' union?
Looks like it's mismanagement, poor decisions, and bad deals done between CEOs and politicians that brought it to the precipice...The reasons for SABENA's bankruptcy are numerous. One of the direct causes was Swissair not living up to its contractual obligations and failing to inject necessary funds into the company. This was because at the time Swissair was having its own financial problems. During the so-called "Hotel agreement", signed on July 17, 2001, Belgian prime minister Guy Verhofstadt met with Swissair boss Mario Corti, who agreed to inject €258 million into Sabena. Mr Corti had made a terrible mistake as the sum was never paid, due to Swissair's own financial problems. The purchase of 34 new Airbus A320 family aircraft, imposed under Swissair's management, was a burden Sabena could not cope with.
After the bankruptcy, a parliamentary commission in Belgium was established to investigate the demise of the airline. The Belgian politicians got a part of the blame; Rik Daems, who, at the time, was Minister of Public Enterprises and Participations, Telecommunication and Middle Classes, received most criticism due to his lack of effort. Swissair itself went bankrupt in October of that year.
Not to mention the Bankruptcy was in NOVEMBER 2001. Wasn't there something else that came just before that, that decimated our industry?
There was a rescue plan on the table - the Pilots did go on strike. This was the final straw.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/1528973.stm
The Pilots Union guys are blacklisted in Belgium for a reason.
Always fly a stable approach - it's the only stability you'll find in this business
Re: Vote results.
From your link:
Seeking an alternative to avoid layoffs by reducing individual block hours...
Sounds like exactly the kind of guys I would want to be working with... looking out for one another vs. every man for himself...
Here's an article about the bankruptcy... seems nobody is blaming the pilot union..
24 hour walkout..The pilots have offered to reduce their working hours to help cut costs and avoid forced redundancies.
"They are losing money because there is very bad management" said Leo D'Hondt, Director of the Belgian Cockpit Association.
"We are flying today with aircraft, long-haul at least, which are almost 100% filled with passengers and even then they struggle to survive so there is something basically wrong," he said.
Seeking an alternative to avoid layoffs by reducing individual block hours...
Sounds like exactly the kind of guys I would want to be working with... looking out for one another vs. every man for himself...
Here's an article about the bankruptcy... seems nobody is blaming the pilot union..
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/amp.theguar ... mandtravelSabena blamed its demise partly on the collapse of co-owner Swissair, which failed to come through with a promised injection of $123m (£84m) in fresh capital.
Swissair has had its fair share of financial problems and had to be bailed out by the Swiss government.
The Belgian government stepped in to provide emergency finance for Sabena last month but aid was curtailed by European Commission rules on state aid.
Sabena was already in distress before September 11, burdened by high labour costs, escalating debts and a chronic inability to make a profit.
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Re: Vote results.
Small potatoes compared to the likes of Swissair and Sabena, but still.....
Yes, 9/11 had a whole lot to do with airline troubles, even the Americans bailed out their operators.
The Canadian aviation picture could have been slightly different if things went a different way.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/canada-30 ... y-1.263968
Yes, 9/11 had a whole lot to do with airline troubles, even the Americans bailed out their operators.
The Canadian aviation picture could have been slightly different if things went a different way.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/canada-30 ... y-1.263968
Attempting to understand the world. I have not succeeded.
veni, vidi,...... vici non fecit.
veni, vidi,...... vici non fecit.
Re: Vote results.
The strict regulatory requirements do not apply to internal communications. It is limited to “investor relations” initiatives. I can’t count the times in the past that AC told its employees one thing ( yes it was open to public consumption) and then told investors exactly the opposite.YYZSaabGuy wrote: ↑Sun May 13, 2018 9:11 amAgreed, the number on its face looks one-sided. Then again, WestJet management will be aware that they are subject to strict regulatory requirements regarding timely disclosure (for example, on a company-owned but publicly accessible website) of material information, which the above arguably is. I'm very confident that somebody, likely in WestJet's corporate finance group, will have developed a model analyzing the cost of the ALPA proposals and supporting a build-up to the $1.274Bn 5-year impact quoted above.
Whether the assumptions underlying that analysis are appropriate is of course debatable, but there will at a minimum be something resembling a defensible rationale in place.
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Re: Vote results.
I've flown/fly with a lot of ex Sabena Pilots - I have yet to hear a single good word about the actions of their Pilot's Union representatives.altiplano wrote: ↑Wed May 16, 2018 6:01 am From your link:
24 hour walkout..The pilots have offered to reduce their working hours to help cut costs and avoid forced redundancies.
"They are losing money because there is very bad management" said Leo D'Hondt, Director of the Belgian Cockpit Association.
"We are flying today with aircraft, long-haul at least, which are almost 100% filled with passengers and even then they struggle to survive so there is something basically wrong," he said.
Seeking an alternative to avoid layoffs by reducing individual block hours...
Sounds like exactly the kind of guys I would want to be working with... looking out for one another vs. every man for himself...
Here's an article about the bankruptcy... seems nobody is blaming the pilot union..
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/amp.theguar ... mandtravelSabena blamed its demise partly on the collapse of co-owner Swissair, which failed to come through with a promised injection of $123m (£84m) in fresh capital.
Swissair has had its fair share of financial problems and had to be bailed out by the Swiss government.
The Belgian government stepped in to provide emergency finance for Sabena last month but aid was curtailed by European Commission rules on state aid.
Sabena was already in distress before September 11, burdened by high labour costs, escalating debts and a chronic inability to make a profit.
I'll bet with hindsight things would have played out very differently.
Always fly a stable approach - it's the only stability you'll find in this business
Re: Vote results.
Hi Eric,
Some of us would maybe like to hear what those pilots had to say. I also fly with a number of those ex Sabena pilots and although they are still a little bitter at the Belgian government of that time, they still have pretty strong feelings that the union did what it could and they VOTED for the action to proceed...
On the ALPA and WS pilots subject, the fall from grace of the now ex CEO was easy to watch (and forecast) from outside of the company. My WS pilot friends and relatives were starting to feel the heat some time ago. I have been through the airline failure mill in Canada before, and while a few fellow pilots from that time STILL blame ALPA, (they never thought the company would ever fail...they had 100% faith in the bosses BS) No pilot's union ever bankrupted any Canadian airline.
The need to keep a level playing field between management and pilots is what should be driving these negotiations. I hope that the results of the CBA for WS stabilises the industry for a while as it seems that it's needed. Time to stop the race to the bottom at the expense of all pilots.
GRK
Some of us would maybe like to hear what those pilots had to say. I also fly with a number of those ex Sabena pilots and although they are still a little bitter at the Belgian government of that time, they still have pretty strong feelings that the union did what it could and they VOTED for the action to proceed...
On the ALPA and WS pilots subject, the fall from grace of the now ex CEO was easy to watch (and forecast) from outside of the company. My WS pilot friends and relatives were starting to feel the heat some time ago. I have been through the airline failure mill in Canada before, and while a few fellow pilots from that time STILL blame ALPA, (they never thought the company would ever fail...they had 100% faith in the bosses BS) No pilot's union ever bankrupted any Canadian airline.
The need to keep a level playing field between management and pilots is what should be driving these negotiations. I hope that the results of the CBA for WS stabilises the industry for a while as it seems that it's needed. Time to stop the race to the bottom at the expense of all pilots.
GRK