
Robert of West Babylon, NY on Dec. 31, 2004
I read the articles (complaining of US Airways travel problems over the 2004 holidays). Notice no one tells you what they paid for their tickets to fly on Christmas Eve or Day.
From reading these stories, I can also see like I stated earlier that it was poor planning on their part to not expect problems at an airport or airline on Christmas Eve or Day. It's no secret that US air and United are in bankruptcy and having labor problems because of it. Just as they were trying to get home or to a relatives to spend Christmas with their families, many employees of the airlines would have liked to do the same.
In the past, to work a holiday in the airline industry meant that you would be compensated for it. You would be paid a fair wage to give up time with your family so that consumers could travel to their loved ones for the holiday. That meant you were probably paid double time and 1/2 your normal pay. Not anymore. I don't work for US Air or United, but I can tell you that at the airline I work for, I went from 12 paid holidays a year down to 5. In addition to that, I went from double time and 1/2 holiday pay to just time and 1/2 pay. So in reality that puts me down to just 2 holidays per year if you look at it in terms of compensation.
For the record, I also worked both Christmas Eve & Day as I will New Year's Eve and Day, as I have for at this company since I started with them going on 7 years now.
There are always 2 sides to every story. That being said I just wanted to point out how bad the morale is in the airline industry at this time. I blame it on very poor management on behalf of the airlines. Management continues to go to their employees for concessions in pay, benefits and job cuts. They never put themselves in the loop for concessions, or blame themselves for any mismanagement. They may make it look like they take a pay cut, but they make it up in other ways such as stock options, increased retirement, golden parachutes etc. They keep running their airlines the same way with no change in the business plan. Their business plan is to go to the employees for givebacks so that they can keep flying.
Well, the employees are fed up with it as they should be. All they expect is to be paid a fair wage and get benefits for what they do. We are working for wages that are so far behind inflation that it's at the point that it just doesn't pay to go to work anymore. These aren't 9-5 jobs with weekends off we are talking about. These are skilled labor jobs, working all hours, weekends, holidays, in the rain, sleet and snow and at times sub-zero weather.
Most consumers don't give any of that a thought when they walk up to get on a plane. They think, hey I bought a ticket to go from point A to B and expect to get there. That's fine, but when I go to work I think, hey I'm a skilled employee and expect to get compensated for my time fairly. I dare you, go call a plumber or an electrician on Christmas Day and see if you can get one to show up at your house, and if they do come what will it cost you?
With oil prices at record highs, every other industry passes the cost increase onto their consumers. Not the airlines, what do they do? They turn to their employees for concessions and lower their ticket prices. This year the average cost of a ticket is 6% lower then it was this time last year. Airline employees are making less, but spending more for everything from gas at the pump to food on the table, and oil is or was at $50.00 a barrel. Does it make any sense?
Thanks for your time.
--Robert