![]() |
| | #1 |
| Newbie Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Camas, WA
Posts: 22
|
Have an opportunity to interview with Pinnacle. Looking for any feedback, pros/cons from any and all, in particular any Pinnacle drivers.
__________________ |
| |
| | #2 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2007 Location: Memphis
Posts: 401
|
PM sent! I have more info on Pinnacle then the FBI , FAA and CIA! |
| |
| | #3 | |
| Old Skool | Quote:
Management has been violating the existing contract left and right, and they seem willing to drag everyone through the mud instead of settling on a new contract. To be honest, I don't have much faith in our management team at all. They'd rather pay more money in penalties to NWA for cancelling flights than sign a deal with the pilots. From the negotiating committee rep I talked to, the lost revenue from the 15 planes sent to Mesaba was more than what they would have paid over the life of the contract to make up the difference b/w what the pilots want and what the wanted. Translation: they would rather lose money by losing airplanes than give in to the pilots. To me, that's just poor business sense and should send shareholders running away. Now, most (myself included) would tell you that those planes were going to Mesaba the whole time, but then the company loses the argument that we lost those planes b/c the union wouldn't deal. Morale here is pretty low. People are pondering quitting b/c they find themselves getting angry with family members and spouses b/c of lingering effects of how they are treated at work. I've always been a "leave work at work" kind of person, so I've been able to dodge that so far. That being said, this place has the potential to be a REALLY good regional. We've got (IMO) one of the best pilot groups around, the flying is challenging and has a good variety, the aircraft are (for the most part) pretty well maintained, and once we get a contract done, I think this will be one of the regionals to beat. The question is, can we survive to that point? Add in the potential Delta/NWA merger, and there's even more haze on the horizon. For example, we're starting ATL-MEM with the -900 next month. Now, in our agreement with NWA, it says we CANNOT do flying for another carrier into a NWA hub. Yet, NWA hasn't made a peep about us flying ATL-MEM under the Delta banner. That says to me they're hoping a deal with Delta goes through.
__________________ "I'm The Doctor, by the way. Run for your life!" | |
| |
| | #4 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2001 Location: Toronto/DTW
Posts: 487
|
I'd bet serious money that Pinnacle gets CRJ9's and maybe CRJ7's for NW and starts replacing the 200's as soon as a pilot contract gets nailed. More CRJ9's for DL are probably likely as well, the contract has provisions for 30-something planes. Hopefully the "safe flying" campaign will have a similar effect that ASA's had, and move things forward. People were much more doom & gloom a year ago during Mesaba negotiations, now everything is rosy. In another couple years, Compass will probably be doing the same song and dance. Seems to be the norm for Northwest (and their descendants).
__________________ The pilots life is founded on three things: sex, seniority, and salary, in that order. Dr. Ludwig Lederer, corporate physician, American Airlines. |
| |
| | #5 | ||
| Old Skool | Quote:
Quote:
My personal opinion is Compass is gonna get Mid-Atlanticed. It was designed as a safe place for NWA mainline furloughs to land, and they don't need that soft spot to land anymore. We might see a few guys flow up or get a seniority number at NWA, but I don't think their gonna make it too far past the 30 month deadline for the mainline seniority number. I wouldn't be surprised to see mainline fold Compass and Mesaba together only to spin 'em off and run with the $$$. 'Course this is all assuming Delta doesn't de-rail the plans altogether.
__________________ "I'm The Doctor, by the way. Run for your life!" | ||
| |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |