Steve Wilkins said:
But then we have that pesky problem again: unions.
Steve,
Until I got to Hawaiian, I felt the same way. Now I've seen just how much the union protects us (or try to). In Hawaiians recent bankruptcy, we would have lost everything - pay, pension and workrules - if it was not for ALPA. As it was, we gave up significantly (about $8 million annually spread over 284 pilots while 14 high managers walked away with $17 million in bonuses and the former owner $25 million in profit from a stock buyback).
Being military you are very protected. How would you feel if Congress decided to cut your pay by 40%, slashed your pension to a 401K, and reduce your 30 days leave to 15 while giving themselves a raise and putting their pension in untouchable trusts? All to offset the raising cost of social security and medicare? After all, shouldn't the military (employees) bear the continually raising costs of of providing the public these benefits? Why should the public pay for their benefits by raising taxes when the government can just reduce employee costs instead?
While I'll grant that unions can go overboard in their zeal, this is not the case in the airline industry now. Everyone has taken pay cuts, etc. It's time for the public to pay for the raising cost of their transportation instead of the employees.