[Sam] Mayer [, a spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association, which represents 9,000 American pilots] added that American doesn't pay pilots whose trips get interrupted and who can't complete the flying they signed up for. The pilots of Flight 331 were on their first day of a multi-day sequence of trips that, had they diverted the plane to another city, would probably have jeopardized their ability to fly out the rest of the sequence. Not completing trips can cost pilots thousands of dollars in lost income, Mayer said.
"Our pilots shouldn't have to sacrifice their principles to get paid," he said.