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-   -   Thomsonfly rumour control (https://www.pprune.org/terms-endearment/266081-thomsonfly-rumour-control.html)

tflier 28th Feb 2007 14:43

Thomsonfly rumour control
 
So has it finally leaked out that there will be dual 737ng/767 ratings for the LGW guys...will p###s off those 75/76 f/o's who have been waiting for their command when the 737 dec capts get there first. Possible forced base moves too.
Interesting times ahead!?

Heffer 28th Feb 2007 14:51

I was led to believe you can't actively fly both the 73G and B757 on your licence, except perhaps a CP under a special exemption maybe.

tflier 28th Feb 2007 15:03

Tfly have been approved by the CAA for mixed fleet flying between the B737 AND B75/76.

StudentInDebt 28th Feb 2007 15:38

My understanding is that MFF will only be allowed on the 73NG and 757 rather than the 767.

MAX 28th Feb 2007 16:01

Yawn.

MAX:cool:

tflier 28th Feb 2007 17:13

I think you have an exagerated sense of your own importance Max. If it's not interesting to you then why take the time to waste bytes.
Remember this is a rumour network, I humbly remind you.

MAX 28th Feb 2007 18:17

Mixed fleet flying and the CAA approval is old news. Hardly a rumour.

Your first post seemed to be trolling for a catfight between seasoned F/O's and 737 DEC's.

Thats what I find boring.

MAX:cool:

Donnie Brascoe 28th Feb 2007 19:01

possible forced base moves ? Explain that as that may have a big impact on a lot of people .. whre from and where to ? I am assuming that with teh forced base move those being forced to move will be paid the required amount according to the MOA ???

bundybear 1st Mar 2007 07:47

Tflier,
Any F/O waiting for a 75/6 command, after all the fleet expansion plan explanations, basing policy rumours,and statements for at least a year to the extent that there will not be anymore promotions on the 75/6 fleet, quite frankly is a fool. There are F/O's on command courses as we speak, who have been in the company for less 3 years. So any senior F/O, not on a command course has either not bid for one, or been deemed "not eligible".
MAX is right, stirrers are boring.

b.anakin 1st Mar 2007 07:58

This is good news. All the extra work required to fly two totally different types must surely be rewarded with a commensurate salary rise.

Dream on.........:{

Bluebaron 1st Mar 2007 10:47

Hi have seen no information to comfirm this rumour exept that the STN guys have been offered 737NG courses for free if they want to leave following their base closure.

BB:confused:

000 3rd Mar 2007 11:07

DECs vs senior FOs?
 
Is it a joke? Guys who joined as DECs where proposed the job and they would have been quite stupid to turn it down. This simply happened because in house FOs were not bidding for the job, that's all. The old aviation saying "never turn down any upgrade" seems to be true.
On the other hand those DECs are a very good financial move for Tfly as they are the cheapest Capts they have ever had with a seniority close to zero.
Concerning MFF and DECs, I really don't see that happening in the near future. Guys flying MFF will be selected according to the seniority list, so DECs should be among the last ones to do it.
Anyway all that is just rumours, wait and see and in the meantime enjoy getting paid for so little flying!:ok:

StudentInDebt 3rd Mar 2007 12:32


This simply happened because in house FOs were not bidding for the job, that's all.
Rubbish! DEC recruitment took place because the company had no means to train the volume of captains required to start the low cost operation. Britannia pilots were not offered the opportunity to bid for commands on the new operation until late in the process and even then only limited numbers could be sent to Hapag-Lloyd to get their command training. There was an intial reluctance to move to Thomsonfly from Britannia once it started operations because there was a wide variance in terms and conditions, once BALPA negotiated the Thomsonfly pilots back onto the Britannia contracts and a free bid was offered there was rush to join, so much so that again the company could not cope with the training requirements so more DECs were needed.

Donnie Brascoe 3rd Mar 2007 15:08

I think you will find that the majority of DEC's started on the old terms and conditions which were at the time way inferior of the 757 fleet terms and conditions. It would also seem that those F/O's who are now transfering across, transfer across to a much higher salary band as a Captain than those DEC's who joined 3/4 years ago. This is of course correct and its the seniority list balancing itself out so nobody has actually lost out. Mind you i thought the rumour was MFF by base not seniority which given the cost sensitive nature of TFLy would be the logical choice if you were a bean counter in Luton, not so logical if you have been here 10 years...

Answers on a postcard to John Cravens Newsround c/o BBC

blue up 4th Mar 2007 07:41

How does MFF fit in with OPC/LPC and line checks? More sim time or the same? I'm wondering about our capacity for this. More outsourced sim guys?

A Very Civil Pilot 4th Mar 2007 11:09

At the moment on the 737 we do an LPC every 6 months; alternating classic then NG. The reason aparanetly is to get the system accustomed to it for when MFF is operational, and we'll* be doing 737/ 'something else' LPCs.
(*in reality 'you'll' be doing MFF as my seniority precudes it!)

Donnie Brascoe 5th Mar 2007 11:29

NewsFlash

The rumour is there are no rumours ???

Normal service will be resumed shortly

A Very Civil Pilot 6th Mar 2007 18:35

Schlittlenellie

Yes you are correct regarding the classic/NG LPC requirement, as it is seen as the same type. The point is that if we are doing an LPC each 6 months, when the MFF kicks in and we'll be flying 737/757, they'll both be current at the same time (albeit with different expiry dates).

Bluebaron 6th Mar 2007 19:14

I've still not heard anything about this? Where did this rumour come from?

BB:confused:

whatdoesthisbuttondo 7th Mar 2007 17:53

What is the source of this story?

I doubt it's true.

Weary 7th Mar 2007 22:48

What a wind-up!
To qualify for MFF as commander you must be 737 and 757 rated. The only way to get a (T-fly) 757 rating is to win it in a seniority based bidding round. Since the T-fly 737 DECs would not have sufficient seniority to do so, I'd opine that the suggestion a 737 DEC is somehow going to beat a (more senior) mainline effoh to a 757 command via MFF is the singularly most colossal pile of horse manure I have seen fertilzing the pages of pprune in quite some time......

Bad Robot 7th Mar 2007 23:48

So what about the guys who came off the 75/76 to get their 73 Commands?
Would they not be eligible to go back with a 75/76 Command?

tflier 8th Mar 2007 07:19

Sorry 'weary' if that upsets you so vehemently, but it will happen Luton first and then Gatwick, and the DEC'S will be included, however much it hurts, as technically there is no precedent, seniority or otherwise. Sorry if that's bad news leaking out.

Weary 8th Mar 2007 08:35

Bad news for me tflier ??? - wrong again. Like your thread, you are clearly making too many assumptions.

StudentInDebt 8th Mar 2007 09:19

Why haven't you raised this on the BALPA forum Tflier? After all what you are suggesting is very serious, following the debacle of the "fleet contraction" at LTN last summer if you let him know I doubt our new CC chairman would let this slip by.

Of course it would help if you actually got the details of the rumour correct first.

tflier 8th Mar 2007 14:05

Not a BALPA member. So no access to their forum I'm afaraid.

whatdoesthisbuttondo 8th Mar 2007 14:59

Why are all of tfliers posts attempts to stir up trouble among thomson crews.
I doubt he even works for tfly.
It's trolling and it's getting a bit boring.

yeoman 8th Mar 2007 15:23

The advice about grabbing an upgrade has always been good. It still is.

However, when TFly first kicked off, there were substanstial disincentives for BY guys to go across - lower salaries, basing, type freezes and lower pension terms to name but a few. Also, at the time, there was little if any hint that the two operations would ever cross pollinate to anything like the degree we have today, the implication being that the 756 fleet would not contract, commands would be available and so on. Times changed; the 756 is now seen as a shrinking fleet, the 73 is running some IT routes and there is an more open basing policy. The guys who went across in the early days took a big punt and I'm delighted it worked for them. They risked much personally.
As has been said, BALPA then negotiated equal T & Cs, the basing policy opened up and much of the risk went so it was suddenly a good place to be for gaining a Command or getting into training etc. The DEC uptake was a stop gap and it doesn't seem to have worked so well for some of the DECs. They have my sympathy but something has to act as a filter for all the varied groups, all with their own interests. Seniority is it.

There are several separate issues here that only touch loosely: Seniority, seat, base and type. The only unifying factor is the bid.

The company will (and has the perfect right to) put aircraft wherever they want. The same applies to their decision to do MFF (which BTW is now fully approved) and to do it where they want. If that doesn't suit you then you must resort to changing your bid. That will be looked at based on seniority (and ability if seat changes / training positions form part of it). I'm sorry if that upsets people but that is the way of the world.

It is pointless saying "I'm a senior Captain based in MAN and I want to do MFF and what makes it worse is a junior guy doing it in LTN". MFF is not running in MAN so I'd best bid for LTN and do it now because I can't displace a junior guy once they actually fill that slot. Stop me if I'm wrong but I personally have never seen a gun being held to anyone's head at either contract signing time or at bid time. You can change your bid any time, that's why it's called a standing bid. There are only root and branch bid runs when there are fundamental changes to the operation.

And finally, my understanding is that MFF will run at LTN first as a controlled experiment - a small base that needs MFF to satisfy the operational requirements of the company. It will then roll out further afield but probably not to MAN and LGW because the operation is big enough to support two fleets of pilots. The added wrinkle is that it will be 737 NG (most if not all Classics will soon be gone) and 757 summer, 767 winter. Why ? Because that is what the operation demands. There will be issues with forced base changes as we already know for sure but that is to do with airframe reductions at thiose bases and not as a function of MFF.

The eternal advice stands: Bid for what you want in terms of seat, base, type and type of operation rather than what you think you will get. If you don't get what you want it is because you a) didn't bid (numpty) or b) are junior to all the other people who did get it (live with it and your time will come). Seniority is global.

The one thing we absolutely must do is avoid the petty internicine warfare bewtween the perceived haves and the perceived have nots. When the company does all this they will be facing costs they will seek to avoid. Some of those costs will be those due to pilots forced to move and that is covered by BALPA agreements (subsidised by some here - enjoyed by all). When the company seeks to avoid those costs, and they will, being a fragmented bunch of self interested groups will hand a strong bargaining chip. Ever heard of divide and rule. The company has.

StudentInDebt 8th Mar 2007 16:00


Not a BALPA member. So no access to their forum I'm afaraid.
Says it all really :suspect:

b.anakin 12th Mar 2007 09:35

Yeoman - well played, good post :D

Tflier - Could you tell me which charity you've nominated to give your recent (BALPA negociated) payrise to? It would be good to make it known so other FLSB could also contribute.

Donnie Brascoe 12th Mar 2007 17:13

So this MMF malarky .. let me get this straight .. we get trained on the 75 or 76 and the NG .. but due to most of our low seniority in the left we dont get any plumb routes like a week in CUN .. just the opportunity to do the friday night Ibiza .. no extra money for all this book work each night before flying just to check you know your "onions"... or will the long haul then be allocated by base .. so potentially a low seniority crew may then be rostered a long haul trip ahead of "Captain and F/O high on seniority list" .. You see MFF is being heralded as close to the "second coming" however it would be nice if someone from management or BALPA would explain the possible implications to us all. My feeling is they havn't as no one has worked it out .. worried naaah .. concerned ..possibly .. intrigued definitely ..

Or is this like Carmen to be thrust on us without any thorough explanation of how it truly works, how it hangs together .. and as the document stated "Bid for what you really want " .. which as we all now know was the worse advice since someone told Tony Blair "You know those Iraqi's we reckon they have weapons of mass destruction" ... so feeling in the dark and grappling for a light switch .. or even a very dim candle just to spot the way forward

yeoman 12th Mar 2007 20:14

Donnie

Sorry if the advice on bidding for what you want doesn't strike a chord with you but it does fly in the face of accepted wisdom! It appears that you are towards the bottom of the seniority list (impression given by your comments - if I'm wrong, ignore me, most do!). Granted, the bottom of the list is going to miss out if, and a big if, the current seniority based ruling on Long Haul bidding remains. I'm not convinced it will.

Already an anomaly that gave the senior Winter Designated Long Haul Pilots (WDLP) an advantage has been removed - essentially the summer guys did all the dross and got penalised when the better winter stuff came along. So, progress, slow but progress. The feeling is that the whole process is long overdue for a revamp and MFF would probably precipitate that. There will still be a process of demand -v- supply and that way round. The only logical way to sort that is by use of seniority but as an exercise, what would you propose?

Other factors include the question "why 767 in the winter and 757 in the summer?". At a guess it is because the Long Haul programme is at it's peak in the winter and is very crew hungry. We have seen the company operating LH out of all sorts of bases so could it be that they plan to extend that and use local based pilots rather than the Gods from afar? Couple that with the fact that MFF is unlikely to happen at MAN and LGW and you could need suntan cream sooner than you think (I'm guessing you're DSA?).

Remember also that the ratio of crews on the Beach Fleet -v- the Fischer-Price Fleet will change and I would see you competing on a seniority basis much more at base level rather than globally. Surely one of the stated aims of MFF must be to try and rein in the astronomical costs of pilots operating away from their base? That said, with current management...................

As for long nights in the books to suffer the Friday IBZ, don't fret, see it as a bit of variation. People do opt out of LH as well. The bottom line is that seniority has always been good to some, not so good to others. Until seniority is replaced that will remain so. Until now I have done well out of it so it would be trite of me to say "I sympathise". So, being trite, having enjoyed being in the right place at the right time, I sympathise with guys who haven't had such a good run! If it's any consolation, my wise (?) crack about the Beach and Fischer-Price Fleets is about to come back and haunt me - I'm on my way over to The Dark Side because that is where I see the future.

Anyway mate, keep yer head down and yer bum up, if nothing else, enjoy the flying and the T & Cs which by any measure are the envy of many and I look forward to meeting you on the line. God help me!:ok:

tflier 12th Mar 2007 20:45

Oh dear, can't wait to fly with you. Yet another prima donna on the 'fischer-price fleet'.

Donnie Brascoe 13th Mar 2007 12:01

tflier .. didnt you know we are all prima donna's on the fisher price fleet .. if you are going to have a pop at us then your can do sooooo much better than that i am sure. come on give it your best shot .. its entertaining if nothing else

yeoman .. an interesting and well thought out post cheers .. and hey its not so bad on the dark side .. look at Darth vader he spent his life on the dark side and ended up being one of the good guys

yeoman 13th Mar 2007 13:03

Thank you Donnie - I shall try and emulate him. I already look like him.

TFlier: An earlier post alluded to most of your posts being of the stirring nature. It is difficult to disagree.

On the subject of BALPA, it is probably unfair and certainly unacceptable to imply you don't have a right of comment because you are not a member. That is your choice as much as it is the choice of members to have joined and accept that the subs benefit those who don't contribute. That too will not change. However you deny yourself an important opportunity, via the BALPA website, to voice your opinion and be heard by those trying to get the best deal for everyone, namely the CC. Unfortuenately you would lose the cloak of anonymity but it means you could actually better your lot. As it is your sniping from the sidelines does nothing for your prospects and gets right up everyone's pipe. By all means challenge the staus quo - progress demands it but come out of the shadows, form a reasoned argument and be heard. If it puts all this inter fleet warfare to bed then sign me up right now - as I said earlier, it plays right into the hands of management.

What is happening here is an attempt at a reasoned debate. I apologise for the fleet size crack as it clearly offends you. There is of course an option to trying to use the established system to better your lot. Leave. Lots of places going at FlyBe. Failing that, accept that there will always be losers, the question is how much of a loser you want to be? Make of that what you will.:hmm:

Anyway, if you like, I'll draw you a picture when I get back from my ballet class.:ok:

EGCC4284 18th Mar 2007 19:53

http://news.google.co.uk/news?hl=en&...I+First+Choice

Donnie Brascoe 18th Mar 2007 20:55

so is this a small amount of turbulence on short finals or windshear warning eight miles out ?? or the sun has got its hat on hip hip hooray ???

Alberts Growbag 18th Mar 2007 21:07

Welcome to First Choice!
 
FT. Sunday March 18 2007 19:24

Tui set for tour business merger.

By Roger Blitz in London and Ralph Atkins in Frankfurt.

The Tui board was on Sunday expected to agree to merge its tour operating business with First Choice a move that would see Europes four leading tour operators consolidate into two in just over a month.

The German-based operator, whose brands include Thomson Holidays of the UK and the pan-European Airtours, would take a 51 per cent stake in a business to be called Tui Travel, according to people close to the proposed deal, creating Europe,s largest tour operator.

First Choice would take the remaining 49 per cent and Peter Long, its chief exeuctive, would run the merged company, which would take over First Choice,s London listing. Michael Frenzel, chief executive of Tui, would be the new company,s chairman.

Tui shipping and other interests would be run separately from its Hanover base. Mr Frenzel has repeatedly resisted calls to split up the group.

Tui supervisory board was locked in talks which began on Sunday afternoon, but the company declined to comment.

The combined group, which unites the number one and number three tour operators in Europe, would have annual revenues of more than £10bn, and expect to have made synergies of £100m by the third year of operation.

The deal is a mirror image of the merger agreed by Thomas Cook and MyTravel, the second and fourth biggest operators whose merger was agreed last month.

The Thomas Cook-MyTravel merger, another German-British combination, killed off First Choices hopes of selling its tour package business, called Mainstream, to either party in order to focus on specialist and adventure holidays.

Both mergers could come to the attention of the European Commission which last looked at competition in the tour operating business in 2000. The industry has since been fundamentally changed by the impact of low-cost airlines and the internet which has revolutionised consumers behaviour in booking holidays.

Like other tour operators, Tui has been under pressure to boost the performance of its travel business activities. But Tuis shipping divisions have also faced restructuring costs and pricing pressures.

In December, Tui signalled it might report a loss for the year and announced that the group would skip a dividend payment. Earlier in the month, it had announced 4,000 job cuts, mostly at Thomson Holidays, reflecting the poor state of the UK travel market.

First Choice, with a market value of £1.4bn, earlier this month reported winter holiday revenues up 12 per cent and said it has exercised options to buy four Boeing 787 airliners to add to its fleet of 32 planes. It also paid £30m for three activity holiday companies.

JPMorgan last month said European tour operators could expect continued good growth and were adapting their strategies to changing circumstances.

A4 19th Mar 2007 08:24

Quote"..... The German-based operator, whose brands include Thomson Holidays of the UK and the pan-European Airtours......."

Since when has TUI had a pan-European brand called Airtours? :confused:

Is this another example of well researched journalism?

A4

Baron buzz 19th Mar 2007 09:47

Tui and First Choice to merge - details on another thread in rumours and news......:confused:


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