777longhaul wrote:
2 acpa pilots, were on the HILL, trying to meet with the Committee.

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777longhaul wrote:
2 acpa pilots, were on the HILL, trying to meet with the Committee.


Rockie good question. Have a look at the other posting selection, on General Aviation, just above the Air Canada header, look at Teacher, who refers to him as his Jazz buddy. (Sky Regional ---Teacher --- Feb 10 Thur)Rockie wrote: Re:Localizer.
Do you work for Air Canada or are you at Jazz?

Rockie: Here is a lesson in Politics 101.Rockie wrote:FETCO is in favour of it with some conditions. They want language ensuring that severance pay would be owing only in the event of involuntary termination (fired, as opposed to involuntarily retired. See next paragraph). They want provisions limiting a person's access to some benefits like insurance and disability as they get older. They also want some undetermined age provision on pension (don't know the details) as well as harmonization with CPP/OAS.
They also want some way for a company to force someone to retire if they are no longer capable of performing their function. They referred to that in the context of age but what I think they meant was in terms of medical fitness and competency, exactly like what we do in the aviation industry.
It all seemed reasonable to me looking at it from an employer standpoint.

If I may... You get a speeding ticket for going 51 KMH in a 50 KMH zone. It's not fair, but you still have to pay the piper because you did not conform to the law.TyrellCorp wrote:And remember folks that it's all about the law and NOT fairness. If one can manipulate the law for personal benefit then that's a great thing in this country.
Rockie wrote:Rhetorical question.
What makes ACPA and many of its pilots think they can stop social evolution dead in its tracks at Air Canada's door?
First off, I have very high consideration and respect for your opinions and posts.Martin Tamme wrote:Rockie wrote: Surely somebody asked what their chances of keeping mandatory retirement were. If nobody asked the question then nobody in that office was doing their job.
What was the answer to that question?
Let me explain by way of example:
Let's assume that after an Equipment Bid, you were awarded the last B777 Captain position. I being senior to you, had also bid it, but was not awarded it. No reason was given. As per the language of the Collective Agreement, I should have been awarded that position and I want ACPA to file a grievance on my behalf.
ACPA agrees with me: In accordance with the Collective Agreement, I should have been awarded that position and takes up my case. Nevertheless, if ACPA takes my side and I win my case, then you will be thrown off the B777. In other words, with ACPA representing my interests, will only lead to damaging yours.
You become very upset with ACPA, that they are taking sides (mine over yours). You believe that ACPA should not solely be representing my interests, but should also be representating yours (which is an implausible task to undertake, because one cannot speak out of both sides of one's mouth) or stay out of it completely by taking a neutral stance (which will give me an excellant chance in winning a DFR).
A union only has one choice in these matters and that is to protect/enforce the provisions of the Collective Agreement.
Could you expand your hint into some tangible phrases so we, the outsiders, can get a grasp of the magnitude of numbers you are alluding to. ?Martin Tamme wrote:Morry Bund wrote: How does the overall financial burden exceed the $4 million that they lose by deferring 10 pilots' retirement by one year? What factors are they putting in the mix to arrive at their numbers? Did you get any clue from this individual as to the factors and/or the reasoning?
We are not talking about just 10 pilots deferring retirement by one year; we are talking about ??? pilots deferring retirement by ??? of years. Having as little as 50 pilots deferring their retirements by ??? years, can affect Air Canada in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
Hint: What is the greatest implied cost that one would encounter under a Formula based pay system, that one would not have under a Status based pay system? In other words, if we were under Status pay, Air Canada would not be fighting FP60 as vigilant as they are now; however, under the Formula based pay system, they have no choice.
NO, the union should have had enough sense to know that the "provision" in question is archaic and no longer valid or defensible. ACPA is now trying to use your argument to defend their actions. We all know that their actions were undertaken to protect the interests of the greedy ACPA elite.Martin Tamme wrote: A union only has one choice in these matters and that is to protect/enforce the provisions of the Collective Agreement.
I started to get the same impression, but time was so limited nobody had a chance to actually dig down and see exactly what FETCO wanted in that regard. There was the assumption it seemed that everybody in that room thought having a DB pension plan meant everybody at the company retired at 60 or 65 with the full pension, in our case $120k/years. I was hoping the witnesses would have had the time to debunk that myth and detail the reality. The issues FETCO raised have been presumably addressed in equivalent provincial legislation, and they also have the benefit of time to see if there have been any problems with the legislation. Hopefully the committee won't be unduly delayed beyond the next election call in forwarding this for third reading. If it is they'll deal with it next parliament. They're already ridiculously behind the times and events have already overtaken parliament on this.Mechanic787 wrote:What conditions? Totally exempting any company that has a DBB pension plan from the total effects the legislation (similar to the Saskatchewan Potash Corporation case from New Brunswick, SCC 2010). I am not kidding. They are proposing that any company that has a pension plan (of any kind) can continue to terminate the employment of employees at any arbitrary age. If this plan goes through, ACPA wins, Air Canada wins, and the Coalition loses.
This is not hypothetical—they are actually threatening such a restriction. And they could succeed.


No, they haven't. Therein lies the problem. There are three provinces where legislation was introduced to maintain mandatory retirement for employees with (bona fide) pension plans when legislation permitting mandatory retirement in general is repealed: Alberta, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick.Rockie wrote:The issues FETCO raised have been presumably addressed in equivalent provincial legislation, and they also have the benefit of time to see if there have been any problems with the legislation.
Did I say the young don't matter? I said repeatedly the young will be fine despite this catastrophic ruling that will destroy their careers forever. The truth is Air Canada is the only place that imposes mandatory retirement at age 60, every other airline goes beyond to at least 65. Have the young been destroyed there? Has the entire airline industry with the exception of Air Canada been destabilized? Have provincially regulated industries and the young people that work for them been irrepairably traumatized?Brick Head wrote:Yes Rockie and longhaul777 the young do matter to society as they are critical to stability. Your dissing of Localizer is exactly what is wrong with your approach to this issue. Your message is they don't matter. In the larger societal context your message reads like young people in general don't matter. In fact they do matter. They are critical.
You have been asked repeatedly how deferred compensation schemes have been damaged, and how that can be addressed. Still no answer. The only reason this issue gets raised at all is because you are fixated on it. The CHRT, CHRC, courts and governments are not concerned for the fate of deferred compensation. Deferred consensation schemes are not sacrosanct. The wellbeing of society does not hinge on deferred compensation schemes. Let it go. This change is here and our pay system will adapt to it if necessary.Brick Head wrote:As for the debate going on on the hill? And here? This issue keeps coming back to the same one. The one you guys vehemently refuse to acknowledge. The issue that is much larger than all of us. The socioeconomic benefit to society of deferred compensation systems and how to address the issue in the absence of mandatory retirement.
I see what you mean. Why wouldn't a challenge against maintaining mandatory retirement in companies with DB plans be successful? I would think it would be easy to prove in a case like Air Canada where people are hired too late to acquire a full pension, and the hardship for women who typically cannot have a full career due to family issues has already been used as rationale many times.Mechanic787 wrote:No, they haven't...Rockie wrote:The issues FETCO raised have been presumably addressed in equivalent provincial legislation, and they also have the benefit of time to see if there have been any problems with the legislation.
I missed something here, what exactly is the deferred compensation scheme that we are talking about?Rockie wrote: You have been asked repeatedly how deferred compensation schemes have been damaged,

Rockie,Rockie wrote:
You have been asked repeatedly how deferred compensation schemes have been damaged, and how that can be addressed. Still no answer.
Rockie buddy, read the rulings. Not just the conclusions. Both the Tribunal and Federal court rulings have been littered with subject matter as to the importance of the benefit system. Both speak of protecting it absent mandatory retirement. What do you think they are talking about "effectively preserving" for crying out loud? Motherhood? Chocolate swirl ice cream? In fact the more your council pushes the opinion of irrelevance wrt this issue the more clarity we have been getting from the courts.Rockie wrote:The only reason this issue gets raised at all is because you are fixated on it. The CHRT, CHRC, courts and governments are not concerned for the fate of deferred compensation.

vic777 wrote:I missed something here, what exactly is the deferred compensation scheme that we are talking about?
Deferred compensation schemes exist. We have one. Deferred compensation doesn't get punted with the end of 15(1)c. I have never said otherwise. Now answer the question.Brick Head wrote:All that question does is bait me into a debate on the legality of a specific alternative. Why have that debate with someone who refuses to acknowledge deferred compensation even exists? First there needs to be an acknowledgment that deferred compensation isn't just a fairy tale. Next there needs to be an acknowledgment that the fairy tale doesn't get punted with the end of 15(1)c. Then? Then we could discuss how. Till then why bother?
Brickhead buddy, read the conclusions. Not just the odd obscure paragraph that considers the factors.Brick Head wrote:Rockie buddy, read the rulings. Not just the conclusions.

Actually paid less than your productivity at the beginning and more than your productivity is worth at the end is more accurate. Deferred compensation is exactly what the words say. Compensation that is rightfully yours delayed until a future date.Rockie wrote:Paid peanuts at the beginning, paid lots at the end.
Brickhead thinks that system is dead by removing mandatory retirement. He keeps talking about measures to compensate for that which nobody has any problem with provided they are not discriminatory. In fact lots of people have talked about modifications to the pay system to compensate. I just don't see where there is a problem.
If our deferred compensation scheme is found to be inappropriate with the elimination of mandatory retirement then modify it as necessary or toss it out completely and get a new system.
Problem fixed.
I don't think we have a deferred compensation scheme. It is not guaranteed it only goes to those who are senior, and bid it. Some retire at Sixty on the EA-32 either by choice or because of Seniority. Also if all 3000+ Pilots on our list were exactly Thirty years old. Those most senior would get max pay for thirty years and those junior would get minimum pay for Thirty years. There is no, "deferred pay system". There's a formula pay system.Rockie wrote:Paid peanuts at the beginning, paid lots at the end.

Rockie your responding to quick for me.Rockie wrote:
Deferred compensation schemes exist. We have one. Deferred compensation doesn't get punted with the end of 15(1)c. I have never said otherwise. Now answer the question.

Oh and I was so hopeful for a break through...........vic777 wrote: There is no, "deferred pay system". There's a formula pay system.

Actually not correct. Graduated tenure pay scales. FO versus CA. Pension. Looks like a duck. Quacks like a duck............vic777 wrote:Also if AC went to an all EA-32 fleet ... there would be no "high pay level" for the Senior Pilots.
You first.vic777 wrote:Therefore there is no ...."deferred compensation scheme" .... never was ..... let's stick to reality guys!