I am not sure which thread to post in: Rumor is that the company was given a 4% raise and it is that raise and of course other things that are causing the pilots to resist.....
True. Pay and scope are the major stumbling blocks.
Here is the situation summed up:
On pay, the company wants us to sign up for pay rates that are on par with carriers like Spirit, Allegiant, or Frontier. This just simply is not going to happen. If the company wants these rates, they are going to have to fight to get them in bankruptcy court. They are going to have to explain to the judge how we should be paid 30-50% less than "low cost" carriers like WN.
The company's scope proposal would open up unlimited domestic code share. In a nutshell, this would allow the company to outsource as much flying as possible. They would be able to stick the AA code on the flight, and collect revenue for doing nothing - a virtual airline. No labor bricks to deal with. For a group in over their heads and unable to properly run an airline, it is no wonder why this is the preferred course of action. Unlimited domestic code share would result in the loss of THOUSANDS of pilot jobs. If you think that the other employee groups would fare any better, think again. Loss of dozens of mainline aircraft to other domestic carriers means loss of jobs across the AA spectrum. Once again, if the company wants this, they can fight for it in bankruptcy court. There is NO WAY IN HELL we will just give this away. Not even for the best pay rates on the globe. What good is high pay rates if you don't have a job?
Could the company get these things in a bankruptcy filing? Yes. However, they are not automatic and they have to make a case for them. In the instances of pay and scope, what they are asking for is far worse than even the industry average of previously bankrupt carriers like United and Delta.
Restore or restructure. Concession stand closed.