Everybody agreed to it during better financial times. You know that.
What am I complaining about?? My pay and working conditions match what the market can bear. I would actually complain (though probably quietly) if my wages were double what they are b/c I have the forsense to know that such rates would cripple and potentially dismantle my company and my job. THAT is what I'm trying to get through to you...unions weren't created as a mechanism to support continuously increasing wages despite the economic environment. I doubt that unions would seek out maintaining or increasing pay during the great depression. Why ask for this now during the "great airline industry depression"?? Because they have evolved into businesses that only look to make a profit for the union leadership and therefore the choices they make are not based on what a company/industry can sustain. My current wages/conditions ARE based on what the market will bear. I can't rah, rah with you there, my friend. You haven't come close to recruiting me. Good luck in your future recruiting attempts.
-chapter 12
NOT. You are not in a free market. The management of DAL gets to decide who makes what, so they pay themselves first, then the rest goes to the employees. If DAL is still losing money, then obviously you are paid above market rates. I'd think the value of a manager in a company that can't make money is somewhere less than ZERO. Based on your posts, I'm thinking you'd settle for much less, and DAL should by all accounts see if they can get you to settle for less. Last I saw, there wasn't a huge market for failed managers. Do you make more than your buddies at Air Tran? After all, they pay more to the guys flying a 737 than you do. Sounds to me like they are actually managing, and you're making excuses. Why can't you make money while paying the same rates as a SWA or Air Tran? Why must you pay less? Are the managers at DAL incompetent? Would you leaving be a good thing for DAL? Maybe then they could get some managers that can actually run a business. And as a bonus, they'd be on newhire pay.