Record summer airline profits are proof that workers are assets that should be invested in, not liabilities that should be limited.
Summer 2022 Airline Profits: Union Made
Organizing
31 October 2022
Unions create a workplace where workers take their jobs seriously, creating the foundations for long-term careerism at a company. In addition to being more productive, unions provide a better view of real-world working conditions, allowing their companies to make smarter decisions. Union workers provide more value, more stability, and higher profits.
Unions have been vilified by management executives for years. It’s nothing new. The standard narrative goes like this: “If a union comes in, we don’t know what will happen. Things could get worse. We know we have some problems. Give us a chance to fix them. A union is not the answer.”
Management couldn’t be more wrong because “the union” is JetBlue GO Crewmembers. It’s us, and we’re already there. All we need is the legal power by unionizing to make our jobs better through a legally enforceable contract.
Employees who unionize and gain the legal right to participate in how their companies are run do so with great success.
The recent earnings reports of US airlines demonstrate this.
Turns out, unionized airlines are performing at the top of our industry. United Airlines earned just under $1 Billion during the summer, earning an astounding $2.81 per share. But United wasn’t alone in posting impressive profits. Alaska raked in a whopping $2.53 a share over the same period. American and Southwest reported earnings of $.69 and $.41 a share, respectively.
Meanwhile, JetBlue management came home with a dismal $0.21 per share. The worst performing unionized carrier, Southwest, posted almost twice the earnings per share as JetBlue management did.
Rigid, heavy-handed, top-down management doesn’t always make the best decisions at a company. As JetBlue’s earnings report proves. But a Unified workforce, with front-line workers able to contribute and add their input as critical decisions are made, is working – especially in commercial aviation.
And, a big part of why that’s happening is precisely because front-line workers might know a thing or two about how best to do our jobs. Management should listen to us, not dictate to us.
Unions play a vital role in ensuring the financial success of airlines. By providing economic certainty, stability, and fairness, unions help airlines deal with the many different externalities that face the industry. Here’s a look at how unions add value to airlines.
Unions help airlines be financially successful by providing economic certainty.
When an airline has a strong union contract, it knows how much it will have to pay its employees each year. This predictability helps the airline budget more effectively long term and plan for the future. It also allows the airline to offer its employees competitive wages, benefits, and working conditions. This helps attract and retain the best talent. Non-union airlines, like JetBlue, are often plagued by high turnover which places a lot more stress on the existing workforce. This leads to OJIs, MSEs, outsourcing, and many other detrimental outcomes.
Unions help airlines by providing stability.
A union contract is a legal agreement between an airline and its employees that outlines the terms of employment. This includes wages, hours, working conditions, and job security. Once a contract is in place, it can only be changed through negotiation between the airline and the workers themselves. This process helps ensure that the workplace is stable, which is essential for an industry constantly facing uncertainty.
Unions help airlines by providing fairness.
Union contracts often include provisions that protect employees from things like arbitrary and unjust discipline and termination, favoritism, discrimination, and sexual harassment. This helps create a fair and safe workplace, which is essential for attracting and retaining the best talent. It also helps protect employees from being taken advantage of by their employers.
Unions help airlines succeed financially by giving front-line workers a seat at the table.
The people who are going to make the best decisions about how to run an airline operation will always be the people who do the actual work. And, that would be JetBlue GO Crewmembers. It’s not that all company bigwigs are entirely clueless. But, company executives would benefit greatly from the operational knowledge of GO Crewmembers. Just think about safety and working conditions. Don’t you think that management would be better off because they HAD to listen to us and take our ideas into consideration when dealing with safety issues and improving working conditions?
Unions ensure that the people who know how the work is done can add their insights and offer real-world expertise as company decisions are made. Executives may know their thing, but Unions will better understand how to keep the workplace motivated, enabled, and productive.
Justice at JetBlue: Union Organizing is a Federal Right
UNIONIZING IS A FEDERAL RIGHT; NO NEED TO BE AFRAIDJustice at JetBlue28 April 2022The right to organize and join a union are fundamental employment rights under federal labor laws. JetBlue management is prohibited under federal law from ever knowing who signed an...
Union Members (And Only Union Members) Have Merger Protections
Union Members (And Only Union Members) Have Legally-Binding Merger ProtectionsJustice at JetBlue21 April 2022The benefits of a Union Contract: legal protections in the event of a merger.JetBlue’s bid to acquire and merge with Spirit Airlines comes with many questions...
Machinists Union Demands Answers to JetBlue’s Potential Misuse of Taxpayer-Funded Airline Aid
Machinists Union Demands Answers to JetBlue’s Potential Misuse of Taxpayer-Funded Airline Aid Justice at JetBlue13 April 2022The IAM is seeking answers to JetBlue’s possible misuse of funds from the Payroll Support Program (PSP), a component of the Coronavirus Aid,...
8,000 Amazon Workers Vote to Unionize – JetBlue Ground Ops is Next
Message from JetBlue Ground Ops:8,000 Amazon Workers Vote to Unionize - We're Next! Justice at JetBlue7 April 2022 Over 8,000 Amazon workers voted to unionize last week. These brave Amazon workers cited sub-standard working conditions and the ability to have a VOICE...
JetBlue Bids $3.6 Billion for Spirit; Union Representation Critical for At-Risk Work
Message from JetBlue Ground Ops:JetBlue Bids $3.6 Billion for Spirit; Union Representation Never More CriticalJustice at JetBlue6 April 2022JetBlue management yesterday announced it offered $3.6 billion to purchase Spirit Airlines. Airline mergers create many...
JetBlue’s Paid Time Off Scheme
JetBlue's Paid Time Off SchemeJustice at JetBlue29 March 2022Many Americans would be surprised to learn that, in many countries, it's normal to work only 11 months of each year. Most workers in nations like Brazil, Finland, and Germany, among many others, expect to...
JetBlue Crewmembers: Union Job Protection Can’t Come Soon Enough
JetBlue Crewmembers: Union Job Protection Can't Come Soon EnoughJustice at JetBlue15 March 2022Last week, CEO Robin Hayes wrote to JetBlue employees saying surging fuel prices threaten the airline industry's recovery from the COVID 19 pandemic. He is correct.CEO Hayes...
JetBlue Crewmembers Deserve More from Northeast Alliance
JetBlue Crewmembers Deserve More from Northeast Alliance Justice at JetBlue28 February 2022 Two-thirds of JetBlue’s operation is now tied up with American’s in the so-called “Northeast Alliance.” American and JetBlue now share revenue and coordinate schedules in New...
Machinists Union Contract Will Remain In Effect After Spirit / Frontier Merger
8 February 2022Machinists Union Contract Will Remain In Effect After Spirit / Frontier MergerAs you are aware, Spirit Airlines has entered into a merger agreement with Frontier Airlines. First and foremost, I want you to know that our newly-ratified contract with...
National Airlines Flight Attendants Vote Overwhelmingly to Join the Machinists Union
National Airlines InFlight Crewmembers Vote to Join Machinists & Aerospace UnionJustice at JetBlue23 January 2022National Airlines Flight Attendants are officially joining the largest and most powerful airline union in the world.The Flight Attendants sought out...
Machinists Union Advocacy: More Funding for More Jobs
[supsystic-social-sharing id='3']The Machinists Non Partisan Political League seeks to advance public policy that benefits airline and aerospace workers. To support the work of the MNPL, please consider recurring, automatic donations of any amount today. Click Here to...
Front Line Input “Crucial to the Success” of Contract Negotiations, says IAMAW District President, Mike Klemm
[supsystic-social-sharing id='3']Input and solidarity from front-line union members are "crucial to the success" of contract negotiations at United and Hawaiian Airlines, according to IAMAW District 141 President Mike Klemm. Klemm is helping to oversee ongoing...
Related News
Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Ken Thiede
Ken Thiede, a beloved and respected leader in the Machinists Union, passed away peacefully on Thursday due to natural causes. He was 87. Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Ken ThiedeCelebrating the Life and Legacy of Ken Thiede, a Lifelong Union Advocate, Mentor, and...
Association Update
This will serve as the official update to the Association membership for M&R, MLS, MCT, MTS, and Fleet Service. September 13, 2024 To Association Fleet Sisters and Brothers, The Association Fleet sub committee met with AA leadership on September 12th to discuss...
Association Update
This will serve as the official update to the Association membership for M&R, MLS, MCT, MTS, and Fleet Service. August 29, 2024 All Association Members: This will serve as the official update to the Association membership for M&R, MLS, MCT, MTS, and Fleet...
Summer Airline Profits: Union Made
31 October 2022
Record summer airline profits are proof that workers are assets that should be invested in, not liabilities that should be limited.
Unions create a workplace where workers take their jobs seriously, creating the foundations for long-term careerism at a company. In addition to being more productive, unions provide a better view of real-world working conditions, allowing their companies to make smarter decisions. Union workers provide more value, more stability, and higher profits.
Unions have been vilified by management executives for years. It’s nothing new. The standard narrative goes like this: “If a union comes in, we don’t know what will happen. Things could get worse. We know we have some problems. Give us a chance to fix them. A union is not the answer.”
Management couldn’t be more wrong because “the union” is JetBlue GO Crewmembers. It’s us, and we’re already there. All we need is the legal power by unionizing to make our jobs better through a legally enforceable contract.
Employees who unionize and gain the legal right to participate in how their companies are run do so with great success.
The recent earnings reports of US airlines demonstrate this.
Turns out, unionized airlines are performing at the top of our industry. United Airlines earned just under $1 Billion during the summer, earning an astounding $2.81 per share. But United wasn’t alone in posting impressive profits. Alaska raked in a whopping $2.53 a share over the same period. American and Southwest reported earnings of $.69 and $.41 a share, respectively.
Meanwhile, JetBlue management came home with a dismal $0.21 per share. The worst performing unionized carrier, Southwest, posted almost twice the earnings per share as JetBlue management did.
Rigid, heavy-handed, top-down management doesn’t always make the best decisions at a company. As JetBlue’s earnings report proves. But a Unified workforce, with front-line workers able to contribute and add their input as critical decisions are made, is working – especially in commercial aviation.
And, a big part of why that’s happening is precisely because front-line workers might know a thing or two about how best to do our jobs. Management should listen to us, not dictate to us.
Unions play a vital role in ensuring the financial success of airlines. By providing economic certainty, stability, and fairness, unions help airlines deal with the many different externalities that face the industry. Here’s a look at how unions add value to airlines.
Unions help airlines be financially successful by providing economic certainty.
When an airline has a strong union contract, it knows how much it will have to pay its employees each year. This predictability helps the airline budget more effectively long term and plan for the future. It also allows the airline to offer its employees competitive wages, benefits, and working conditions. This helps attract and retain the best talent. Non-union airlines, like JetBlue, are often plagued by high turnover which places a lot more stress on the existing workforce. This leads to OJIs, MSEs, outsourcing, and many other detrimental outcomes.
Unions help airlines by providing stability.
A union contract is a legal agreement between an airline and its employees that outlines the terms of employment. This includes wages, hours, working conditions, and job security. Once a contract is in place, it can only be changed through negotiation between the airline and the workers themselves. This process helps ensure that the workplace is stable, which is essential for an industry constantly facing uncertainty.
Unions help airlines by providing fairness.
Union contracts often include provisions that protect employees from things like arbitrary and unjust discipline and termination, favoritism, discrimination, and sexual harassment. This helps create a fair and safe workplace, which is essential for attracting and retaining the best talent. It also helps protect employees from being taken advantage of by their employers.
Unions help airlines succeed financially by giving front-line workers a seat at the table.
The people who are going to make the best decisions about how to run an airline operation will always be the people who do the actual work. And, that would be JetBlue GO Crewmembers. It’s not that all company bigwigs are entirely clueless. But, company executives would benefit greatly from the operational knowledge of GO Crewmembers. Just think about safety and working conditions. Don’t you think that management would be better off because they HAD to listen to us and take our ideas into consideration when dealing with safety issues and improving working conditions?
Unions ensure that the people who know how the work is done can add their insights and offer real-world expertise as company decisions are made. Executives may know their thing, but Unions will better understand how to keep the workplace motivated, enabled, and productive.
Related News
Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Ken Thiede
Ken Thiede, a beloved and respected leader in the Machinists Union, passed away peacefully on Thursday due to natural causes. He was 87. Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Ken ThiedeCelebrating the Life and Legacy of Ken Thiede, a Lifelong Union Advocate, Mentor, and...
Association Update
This will serve as the official update to the Association membership for M&R, MLS, MCT, MTS, and Fleet Service. September 13, 2024 To Association Fleet Sisters and Brothers, The Association Fleet sub committee met with AA leadership on September 12th to discuss...
Association Update
This will serve as the official update to the Association membership for M&R, MLS, MCT, MTS, and Fleet Service. August 29, 2024 All Association Members: This will serve as the official update to the Association membership for M&R, MLS, MCT, MTS, and Fleet...