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-   -   BMI puts 600 jobs at risk? (https://www.pprune.org/terms-endearment/396943-bmi-puts-600-jobs-risk.html)

turbowhat 25th Nov 2009 11:20

BMI puts 600 jobs at risk?
 
Any more news on this? where will they be going from? :bored:

JAR 25th Nov 2009 11:29

Thread on Airlines Airports and Routes

K.Whyjelly 25th Nov 2009 11:30

Flights from Heathrow to Brussels, Tel Aviv, Kiev and Aleppo will be suspended in early 2010 with services from Heathrow to Amsterdam being suspended at the end of the winter 2009/10 period. We will however still continue to offer services from London to Brussels through our codeshare agreement with Brussels Airlines. In addition to these route suspensions the seasonal services from Heathrow to Palma and Venice will not be reinstated in summer 2010.
This will mean in 2010 a total of nine mainline aircraft are surplus to requirements compared to 2009. This includes two of the five Embraers operating on mainline routes that will be returned to bmi regional. Leases will not be extended on aircraft when they expire in the first half of 2010, including two of the three long haul Airbus A330 aircraft. We will therefore continue to serve mid haul markets with two long-range aircraft and our fleet of A321

We expect to reduce our mainline capacity in 2010 by removing the nine aircraft from the fleet and suspending seven unprofitable routes. Regrettably this has an inevitable consequence on the number of staff required for the remaining business. We anticipate that in bmi mainline and bmi regional nearly 600 fewer full-time equivalent positions will be needed to support the reduced flying programme. Job reductions will affect all areas of the business. Additional job losses cannot be ruled out as we further restructure corporate overhead functions in line with a reduced flying programme and further communications will follow. There will be no room to carry surplus jobs in any part of the business

Figures of 79 captains and 50 F/O's coming out of LHR

Mister Geezer 25th Nov 2009 12:39


Leases will not be extended on aircraft when they expire in the first half of 2010, including two of the three long haul Airbus A330 aircraft. We will therefore continue to serve mid haul markets with two long-range aircraft and our fleet of A321
bmi are not renewing the leases on two out of three 330s, yet reference is made to operating 'two long range aircraft'. :confused:

barroon 25th Nov 2009 12:43

The two "long Range" aircraft referred to are the last remaining A330 and the Asteaeus 757.

stormin norman 25th Nov 2009 12:54

'Additional job losses cannot be ruled out as we further restructure corporate overhead functions in line with a reduced flying programme and further communications will follow. There will be no room to carry surplus jobs in any part of the business'

Worse to come i fear ,some i hear have already received their notice.

Captain Airclues 25th Nov 2009 13:00

I thought that Bmi had an agreement with BALPA that there would be no redundancies while the 757 wet lease was in operation. Is this correct, and if so, do Bmi intend to break this agreement?

Dave

NutLoose 25th Nov 2009 13:27

But then it's not BMI anymore, it is Lufthansa

fmgc 25th Nov 2009 13:45

Will Lufty be putting their aeroplanes into LHR to fill the vacant slots?

jet.man123 25th Nov 2009 17:25

The ACMI work will stop Jan/Feb but that won't effect the numbers of crews. Luft were bound to make cuts, the company has been making huge losses on some routes and only retained them for strategic reasons. What abou the pay to fly schemes? SSTR. surely they will stop now

acbus1 28th Nov 2009 07:37


I thought that Bmi had an agreement with BALPA that there would be no redundancies while the 757 wet lease was in operation. Is this correct, and if so, do Bmi intend to break this agreement?
The words bmi, BALPA and agreement seem to change before my eyes into lying sheisters, apathetic incompetents and broken promises.

Must come from observing previous history.

You should try it.

Looker 28th Nov 2009 08:02

Unfortunately this is what happens when the naive wanders into the snake oil saleman's tent.

Still - only another few days before the purveyor of snake oil departs leaving a unique legacy of corporate muddled thinking and rock bottom morale. I doubt whether his severance package will be as paltry as the one offered to those made redundant.

At least we won't have to look at a picture of the grinning moron in our in house magazine any more.

acbus1 28th Nov 2009 08:09

I shudder to think what he uses snake oil for.

Mister Geezer 28th Nov 2009 08:30


the snake oil saleman's tent
Is that one of the attractions for the kids?

bluelearjetdriver 28th Nov 2009 09:18

Just to clarify any rumours, the 757 will become a dry lease to be operated by Bmi crews, but the big sticking point will be the Jungle Jets operating for Mainline out of LHR. What a mess....

Bruce Wayne 28th Nov 2009 10:05


the 757 will become a dry lease to be operated by Bmi crews,
Say again ?

bluelearjetdriver 28th Nov 2009 10:34

the 757 will become a dry lease to be operated by bmi crews

shaun ryder 28th Nov 2009 10:52

A sticking point as far as mainline crews are concerned yes. I will show my behind on the town hall steps if they ever end up flying them though.

The Real Slim Shady 28th Nov 2009 12:44


the 757 will become a dry lease to be operated by bmi crews
Cabin crew maybe as company reps but not pilots.

one day soon 28th Nov 2009 13:06

The agreement has already been made, the only sticking point was how many which has now also been agreed at 14 pilots

The Real Slim Shady 28th Nov 2009 13:51

You cannot be serious!

ACMI crews while mainline crews are made redundant?

Bruce Wayne 28th Nov 2009 15:09

glad someone else picked up on that slim.. my "say again" comment was perhaps a bit oblique !

one day soon 28th Nov 2009 20:18

Very serious!
To explain, I gather that Balpa had an issue with the 757 flying mainline routes if mainline pilots were let go, so the solution was for the BMI board to approach Astraeus with the offer to extend the contract beyond March if they were to use BMI pilots to fly it.
Unfortunately not much use to us guys who are bound to be laid off in six months :ouch:

fade to grey 30th Nov 2009 14:38

I understand the issue here, but would bmi really spend twenty odd grand on each pilot's TR for a max of one year extension.

This might have a negative effect on us astraeus mates if true, but i don't suppose anyone on here gives a ...

K.Whyjelly 30th Nov 2009 19:06


Originally Posted by fade to grey (Post 5349659)
I understand the issue here, but would bmi really spend twenty odd grand on each pilot's TR for a max of one year extension

From the latest Q & A
Q Has there been any mention of the impact the 757 lease has on our operation / redundancies – Is it still flying for us? If so how does this effect the situation?

A. The 757 contract will be renewed for a further year. Airbus narrow body aircraft do not have the range necessary to operate some essential services non-stop. Agreement has been reached with Astraeus for 14 bmi pilots to fly their aircraft so mitigating the effect on pilot jobs in bmi.


Q How are we going to select which pilots go on the 757?

A. This will be a secondment so we will seek volunteers after discussions with BALPA.

Q The pilots who applied to go on the 757 last time, do they need to re-apply.

A. There will be no requirement for a further interview with Astraeus, but they will need to register their interest with J H or B B.

Bamboid 1st Dec 2009 19:34

As Fade To Grey has alluded, BALPA saving 14 jobs at BMI LHR presumably just means that 14 jobs are lost at Astraeus LGW.

Same P45, just a different uniform.

Mister Geezer 2nd Dec 2009 13:13


I understand the issue here, but would bmi really spend twenty odd grand on each pilot's TR for a max of one year extension.
Those 330 leases were obviously very expensive!

stormin norman 2nd Dec 2009 15:28

You couldn't make it up.

pilotsama330 4th Dec 2009 20:04

PAYG Cadets : Why are they still here?
 
I'm really surprised that everyone is concentrating on the Astreaus contract, which appears to have been worked out reasonably amicable whilst everyone is glossing over the fact that bmi have made NO MENTION of removing the Pay As You Go cadets.

At any time 8+ cadets on this reprehensible scheme are going to be flying as a First Officer for bmi until they reach 150 hours, some 2-3 months later!!! Meanwhile Company First Officers are at home twiddling their thumbs on standby whilst these cadets take their hours and jobs.

bmi are talking about 129 redundancies yet these cadets will still be there after the bmi staff have been shown the door. This means that 8+jobs could have been saved but instead it appears the company are more interested in protecting the training captains from demotion to line captains, which is not suprising as 90% of bmi pilot managers are also training captains.

The whole scheme is disgusting, bmi are willing to let 8 pilots lose their jobs so they can continue to train and then charge these cadets £40'000 for the privilege of joinging the dole queue with people with 2000 more hours on type.

Surely from a moral if not legal standpoint bmi has to do everything in it's power to mitigate redundancies, surely this is exactly the opposite on every conceivable level?

Surely this scheme should have been finished the day the redundancies were announced???

skip.rat 4th Dec 2009 23:39

Ref: PAYG cadets-

The whole scheme is disgusting, bmi are willing to let 8 pilots lose their jobs so they can continue to train and then charge these cadets £40'000 for the privilege of joinging the dole queue with people with 2000 more hours on type.
-Not true;
The morality of these guys being here (and I have to say their sanity) is questionable, but given that it has been acknowledged that the revenue generated keeps the excess trainers training, it is preferable from the airline's point of view to maintain the currency of this valuable resource in the event of a future upturn. As for the guys 'displaced' from their flights they can, if they want to, come along for the ride and claim: a) the flight pay, and b)the hours as 'other flying'. The company has indicated that if anyone in the 'drop zone' is getting close to an hours target for eligibility, or ATPL unfreezing, then they will endeavour to roster these guys' hours to the max.

The bottom line is that no-one will lose their job as a result of these cadets, and if their presence is affecting hours, etc. then the aim is to minimize that effect.

From a personal point of view, given that the daily expenses probably wouldn't cover the cost of petrol, etc; and I'm not chasing hours,- I am more than happy to spend an extra day with my family on the few occasions where I'm given a day off in lieu of these cadets.

-But, for clarity; once again, I question the morality of such schemes, and also the wisdom of the cadets in the current climate, given that they will probably be

joining the dole queue with people with 2000 more hours on type
:hmm::hmm::hmm::ugh:............ultimately, who'd get the next job???????.......

S.R.

stansdead 5th Dec 2009 09:42

Fade to Grey.....
 
Why would anyone be worried about jobs being lost at AEU?

As your lovely colleague RAINBOE has pointed out on the Aer Lingus thread, this is all about MARKET FORCES.......

.....AEU were happy to see Aer Lingus Pilots laid off, so I can't really see many people shedding a tear for what many see as a parasitic union busting airline.

Perhaps Rainboe will be one of the 14?

Anyway, what goes around comes around........

(Just had a thought. Perhaps the benevolent AEU management will type you all on these 320's that are being used to destroy other pilots' careers? Naah. Thought not. The taxi driving Spivs are only interested in one thing. THEMSELVES.)

pilotsama330 5th Dec 2009 12:47

Lets call it what it is - A Training Captain Protection Scam
 

but given that it has been acknowledged that the revenue generated keeps the excess trainers training, it is preferable from the airline's point of view to maintain the currency of this valuable resource in the event of a future upturn.



we should tell the truth
bmi have always been top heavy with trainers, even when the airline didn’t run a command course for over 7 years the training department flourished. Right now at current numbers they have too many trainers, yet they are reducing the flight deck population by over a quarter and surprise, surprise the trainers find a way to protect themselves during this time.

Let’s not paint this cadet scheme as anything other than what it is – a jobs for the boys training ticket protection scheme!!!


From a personal point of view, given that the daily expenses probably wouldn't cover the cost of petrol, etc; and I'm not chasing hours,- I am more than happy to spend an extra day with my family on the few occasions where I'm given a day off in lieu of these cadets.



Then I can only assume you will be one of the first to volunteer for redundancy, think of how much petrol money you will save then.

I'm sure the 8 redundant pilots who could have kept their jobs had this scheme be thrown out will have bigger things to worry about than petrol money.

SW1 5th Dec 2009 16:00

As far as I am aware, there are 3 ATP cadets at BMI. They will be finished in January. As a previous poster has pointed out, the existing FOs get the priority in terms of hours.

In terms of the dole, why am I getting email after email saying Etihad will be coming to conduct interviews and other jobs for Rishworth in the desert or Vietnam.

Seems these job cuts are inevitable as route after route is culled this coming year.

Honest Fr@nk 5th Dec 2009 16:11

Stansdead-

Dont tarnish the pilot workforce at AEU with the same brush as the management. That seems to be what you are saying. That is rather shortsighted I'd say.

skip.rat 5th Dec 2009 16:33

pilotsama330-


Let’s not paint this cadet scheme as anything other than what it is – a jobs for the boys training ticket protection scheme!!!
Sorry, but that's a load of b*ll*cks. If the PAYG cadets stop coming, it has been stated at the roadshows that the likelihood is that the training tickets will be pulled for those over & above the required. I was merely stating that if the revenue coming in was paying to keep the trainers with their 'ticket', the only downside will be the hours accrued by those taken off their sectors. (and that crewing will endeavour to put as many hours as poss towards those guys).


Then I can only assume you will be one of the first to volunteer for redundancy, think of how much petrol money you will save then.

I'm sure the 8 redundant pilots who could have kept their jobs had this scheme be thrown out will have bigger things to worry about than petrol money.
Firstly,- er,- no I won't - why should I? - anyone who needs the hours or expenses is more than welcome to take my place on the jumpseat.

I see, then - so you're saying that if you were rostered a day off in lieu of these cadets (which you could use to spend with your family, for example) - you would travel to work and either sit on the jumpseat of an aeroplane to earn a tenner in expenses, or sit around the crew room & the terminal for said period of time (where a few cups of coffee & a sarnie will easily cost you a tenner) - and travel back home again having spent a similar amount on petrol!??

I note that you keep banging on about 8 jobs going as a result of the PAYG cadets.
The existence of these guys makes diddly-squat difference to the numbers at the end of the day.
- in an ideal world they shouldn't be there, I have said so before, but with respect, I really don't see your problem with these guys.

The real problem is the fact that there are EMBs flying mainline routes out of LHR in contravention of the scope agreement; this alone is gonna cost 30 jobs if it is not resolved. - rather makes all of the grief above seem like a p*ss in the ocean, doesn't it?

S.R.

Deep and fast 5th Dec 2009 16:35

SW1

In terms of the dole, why am I getting email after email saying Etihad will be coming to conduct interviews and other jobs for Rishworth in the desert or Vietnam.
At least you guys with Airbus ratings have some options! The Embraer guys are just :mad: with no other 145 opportunities.

D and F :8

stansdead 5th Dec 2009 18:36

Honest Frank,

Let's make this totally straight. I don't have any sympathy for AEU losing work, when that work rightfully and legally belongs to others.

You lose the 757 work? Well, it was a legally agreed deal between BMI and it's pilots that AEU were only filling a gap. ACMI work is notoriously fickle.

Aer Lingus? Well, it seems 100 Irish Pilots were sitting at home awaiting redundancy as AEU/AL did the dirty.

You have loudmouths like Rainboe spouting joyfully about MARKET FORCES and gleefully telling all and sundry that this is the way forward.

Well, now the Chickens are coming home to roost for some, and I personally hope that those who have crowed about MARKET FORCES and how lucky people are to be able to apply for their own jobs.....etc etc etc.... well, let's just say I am looking forward to seeing some medecine being doled out.

Short sighted? No, not me. I'm a forward thinking bloke who knows all too well that if any AEU pilots are laid off they'll find new jobs. Of course, they'll be MARKET FORCES pay rate jobs, but Rainboe should be able to advise you.........:yuk::yuk::yuk:

fade to grey 7th Dec 2009 07:50

Stansdead,

"why would anyone be worried about jobs being lost at aeu?"

Well firstly anyone with a shred of common human decency: Personally I am concerned when any pilot loses their job as I have been through it and it is not a pleasant time, more selfishly it always limits the options in the industry in general.Anyway there is no indication this will occur as we always have new stuff ticking over thanks.

Your issue seems to be with 'rainboe' so i suggest you confine your vitriol to your argument with him.

stansdead 7th Dec 2009 09:11

It's amazing how quickly the wheel turns isn't it?

Only a few weeks ago the deal was AEU taking work from other Pilots in AL Mainline in an attempted Union Bust.

Now, it's Midland Pilots standing up for their rights and flying their own rightful work.

Bravo!! I applaud them.

If you work on the margins for an AEU (ACMI) type operator and offer your services to all and sundry, this is always going to happen.

Rainboe (with his fat pension - already discussed) and that nice Heavy Metal type chappie will of course stand down to protect their colleagues. So, the number should be a maximum of 12............

What sticks in my throat is that AEU guys didn't bat an eyelid when the Union Bust was being introduced.... in fact, there was a distinct I'm alright Jack attitude. But now, less than a month on, we're meant to be gnashing our teeth in angst at Midland Pilots taking back what is their legally recognised flying.

Pot. Kettle.

carbheatout 7th Dec 2009 09:26


What sticks in my throat is that AEU guys didn't bat an eyelid when the Union Bust was being introduced
How do you know that Stansdead?

The pilots will keep their heads down and get on with the job. The management will do whatever is neccesary to keep the company ticking over.


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