I agree! Mike Quill would have never led such a cowardly surrender! He would have fought.Thrustfuljet said:What do you think Michael J Quill would think about what transformed here at American Airlines last year in negotiations?
I for one believe he is rolling over in his grave. I believe he would have put up a better fight than what we witnessed last year. I believe he would have had the guts to fight it to the end. I don not share all his beliefs but I do not think he would have turned tail a run. I do not believe he would have forced people to accept a contract they voted down like the twu did with the Tech Services people here at AA.
This one reason with Tech Services was the last straw for me. An injustice to one is an injustice to all.
I say lets bring in AMFA!!! Give someone else a try who is willing to fight!!!
TWU has had many years on trying and all I have seen is concessions.
Time to pull together and fight...
If you want to see the TWU in a positive light simply go over to Local 100. Here you will see a different TWU. You will see a union that is outspoken, courageous, idealistic and committed. This is in direct contrast to the International that is always trying to subdue them. You see if Sonny tried to do to them what he did to Local 562 they would simply leave the TWU and form a new union. They hate Sonny Hall over there, the last time Sonny showed up at one of their rallies he was booed off the podium.
Yes the TWU does have a great history, too bad that those who have taken it over are so undeserving.
Mike Quill stood up to a Federal Judge and told him that "he may drop dead in his long black robes". Could you see Sonny saying that? Little? Any of them? Rojer Toussaint made the headlines when he said "Shut up Mike"(Mike Bloomberg-NYC Mayor). Thousands chanted it in front of City Hall. In the meantime Sonny was telling the press that there would be no strike and that he would remove 100s officers if they struck.
There is no comparasion between todays TWU/ATD or the International and the Union that Mike Quill and all his IRA comrades in Clan Na Gael helped to found so many years ago. Local 100 has many similarities (Forbes magazine listed Local 100 as one of the ten most dangerous unions in the country) however Sonny has done a good job at isolating them within the TWU by dispensing titles within the International and using the promise of such titles as a means of buying loyalty, especially from Presidents who know that they are just one election away from having to return to the floor. After all, we know that the worst thing that can happen to a TWU International officer is to have to work under the conditions he put in place. Local 100 has broad support within the NY Labor scene. The Chief, New Yorks only Independant Labor Newspaper regularly blasts Sonny Hall. They printed one of my letters blasting Sonny. At New Yorks Labor Day parade Sonny is a no show. Sonny preferrs to remain locked up in his corner office looking down Broadway.
This union was founded during the Depression, when the unions in place at the time were telling their workers to accept pay and benifit cuts or risk losing their jobs. Sound familiar? At the time there were many companies providing transit service in NY and there was no unity across the system. There were several different unions, workers doing the same work would be in different unions, if at all, depending on what company they worked for.
It seems that for us, things have come full circle. Just as the TWU gave the old self serving unions the boot and united transit workers across the city into one union the AMFA is giving self serving unions the boot and trying to unite our class and craft into one union. The effort to ressurect this union from within and to get what we need-industrywide solidarity, is too huge a task, especially when there is an easier more direct means to get that. Its simply not worth trying to change this union because it is beyond repair when it comes to serving our needs. Industrywide solidarity is somethin that the TWU never sought. In fact during the huge 1966 airline industry strike, the TWU continued to work as most of the industry shut down. Industrywide solidarity has never been , nor will it likely ever be a priority of the TWU. Especially when those at the top see no need for change and a huge effort would have to be made, and time expended, simply to get in leaders who might see things differently.Are card dealers from Vegas, school bus drivers from Georgia, Railroad workers from Ohio, AMTRACK workers from Arizona or NASA workers from Florida, who on average earn $15/hr with the TWU going to be willing to fight FAR 145 to preserve $30/hr Airline mechanics jobs? THe only time that we could reasonbly expoect any real help from these workers is when our wages sink below theirs. If we stay with the TWU we may in time see that. I'm not interested in paying that much of a price. I'd rather be in a union where I can rely on the support of my fellow mechanics to fight for things that are in our interests. I would rather belong to a union that can afford to focus on our issues and not have to balance, or worse yet, trade off one groups interests for anothers. It did not miss my eye that AMTRACK, a company that has survived on government subsidies for years, got funding as we were forced to take massive pay and benifit cuts to keep our industry profitable. It costs less to fly to most places than to take the train! The same union represents workers at both AA and AMTRACK. I could see the TWU trading us off for AMTRACK funding in the dealmaking at DC, they maintain the dues flow from both,however I could never see a union that represents just one class and craft of workers trading off their interests for workers in another industry. While I would be willing to support AMTRACK workers I'm not willing to take a $20,000 a year cut in pay. If that makes me greedy then what does it make those who say that I should take pay cuts while they dont?