Title: How to use this slide show: . Please Press the
1 How to use this slide show .
Please Press the F5 key on your computer
now. This will enlarge the screen to full
screen mode if it isnt there already. Use
your computers arrow keys to advance the slide
or to backup. The same can be done by using
your keyboards space bar to advance the slide
Use the backspace key to go back.
? ?
07-19-06
2Article 13B -- Domestic This will also affect
International staffing upgrades B is line
construction (how your line will look like),
while 13A is TRIP building
- We will focus on how the major rules affect how
your line is built. - The type of lines that can be built.
- The credit allowed on your line -- Hard Cap (Line
Construction Cap) - Comparisons to ABX and FDX.
- The affect to hiring.staffing and upgrades
(quality of life issues). - Something to keep tucked away through all of
this - How many times have we heard The lines looked
great, but it was actually a killer. - With that said, rules that govern how a TRIP is
built (13A) are also available to be viewed at
http//IPAonTop.org - 13A relates to daily activities Duty, Rest,
Legs, Block, Circadian, etc.
3Domestic Line Building
- There are only 4 combinations of domestic lines
that can be built. - Anything goes flying You can work up to every
week mixed with day night mixed - with day Turns and/or night Turns. These are
your Base Trip Lines - Night flying with 4 trips or less per bid period.
These are your EDW lines. - Day ONLY flying up to every week per bid period.
These are your Non-EDW lines. - Pure Turn lines -- Pure day or pure Night.
4Domestic Line Building
- The following is in reference to
- Anything goes flying You can work up to every
week mixed with day night mixed - with day Turns and/or night Turns. These are
your Base Trip Lines - 50 of the lines can work up to 3-weeks per pay
period (Long Block of days off) - 50 of the lines can work up to 4-weeks per pay
period (Short Block of days off) - Notice that it can be broken down into short
and long blocks of days off. -
- The next slide will expand upon this and provide
actual TA references.
20 of all your lines may be built in this manner
513.B.b.2.d.5. (p.20 PDF p.171) BASE Trip Lines
MAX of 20 of the TOTAL flying lines may be Base
Trip Lines Base Trip Lines are a mix of
everything day night flying trips /or turns
can fly every week per PPD. Thus, 20-lines fall
under this rule.
50 min of those lines can be built 3-weeks per
PPD
50 max can be built up to 4-weeks per PPD
13.B.b.2.d.2. (p.20 PDF p.171)
13.B.b.2.d.2.
- 10-lines (50 min of 20)
- Must meet Long-Block limits
- Option 1
- 1-block of 6-days off
- AND
- 1-block of 4-off
-
- OR
- Option 2
- 1-block of 9-off
- UPS can build 3-weeks of flying per PPD (Similar
to todays flying).
- 10-lines (50 max of 20)
- Must meet Short-Block limits
- 2-blocks of 3-days off
- AND
- 1-block of 4-off
- UPS can build up to 4-weeks of flying per PPD
(similar to MIAs flying).
RELAX a bid line example will follow after this
slide.
-
- Day night flying trips are allowed to be
mixed if they are scheduled w/30-hrs off in
between - or as long as rest/time in between trips is at
least 18-hrs, - but only if the last DP of the preceding trip is
less than 6-hrs of duty.
13.B.b.2.d.3.
6Examples of what can be built (previous slide
examples).
- This is what can be built under the new rules
20 of the TOTAL flying lines can look like this. - The trips on these lines can be both day and
night flying they can be mixed with Turns and
can fly up to 8 weeks straight. - Substitute any layover city because the network
is changing the new rules allow UPS to omit
city purity. - NOTE Sunday commercials are NOT mandatory and
with a change in the network, you may see flying
on days that you normally dont see now /or even
time periods not seen now. In other words, a two
day weekend may be something of the past in
upcoming years a third sort in a 24-hr period
is possible.
7Let me emphasize this note
NOTE Sunday commercials are NOT mandatory
and with a change in the network, you may see
flying on days that you normally dont see now
/or even time periods not seen now. In other
words, a two day weekend may be something of the
past in upcoming years a third sort in a 24-hr
period is possible.
- With the implementation of the Postal contract,
MENLO, and other new flying, we may see an
increase of OPERATING flights on the weekend. In
the future under this updated network, this could
create a large reduction of non-operating duty
periods to get you into position (CML DHs).
- Therefore, it is not too far fetched to see that
we could see trips built that start late in the
week and only rest on one of the two days during
the weekend or even DH. and then operate to
midweek. - Example
- Saturday Operate UPS AC out of (from) base
- Sunday Layover or maybe even DH to pick up the
trip elsewhere. - Monday Operate UPS AC
- Tuesday Operate UPS AC
- Wednesday Operate UPS AC back to base. (This
could have also ended on Tue instead of Wed,
etc.)
- This can eliminate a lot of commercial DHs and
much of this flying can be built without city
purity. New type of stuffers can be produced
and used.
- Could all this new flying finally create a 3rd
sort in a 24-hr period? Instead of the AM and PM
sort seen today, a third sort may present itself
to dramatically change things further. - NOT thinking outside the box hurt us during the
last contract with the introduction of the
Teamster Team Driver. It eliminating the last
sort of the week from us (reduction in flying)
created havoc for our schedules. This new flying
could do the same thing. - Do our rules take this into account?
Something to think about.
8What about the remainder of those domestic night
flying lines?
- We started out with 100-lines of which 20 were
built as Base Trip Lines (anything goes lines) - That leaves us with 80-lines that contain either
night flying or day flying. - Lets say that 70 of those lines contain ONLY
night flying. - The next two slides represent what could be
Week-On/Week-Off flying.
9Domestic Line Building
This is from slide 3. IGNORE the embossed
- There are only 4 combinations of domestic lines
that can be built. - Anything goes flying You can work up to every
week mixed with day night mixed with day
and/or night Turns. These are your Base Trip
Lines - Night flying with 4 trips or less per bid period.
These are your EDW lines. - a. A minimum shall have at least 5-days off
in between (week-on/week-off) - b. Therefore the remaining 25 (the max) may
use hours instead of days to separate - them
-
- Day ONLY flying up to every week per bid period.
These are your Non-EDW lines. - Pure Turn lines -- Pure day or pure Night.
Lets focus on bullet 2 The next slide provides
actual TA language. The slide thereafter breaks
it down for you further
10TA language
Article 13.B.2.c. pages 19 20 (PDF pages 170
171)
- The text in the red box is what creates week-on
week-off flying for 75 of these type of lines.
Well actually 4-trips or less per BID period.
There is a difference.
- Again, when you see EDW, think NDA trips/lines.
11 Again 70 lines are pure night flying. Thus, the
following rules apply to those 70-lines.
The remainder 25.. can be 2-weeks in-a-row
followed by 2-weeks off then repeat itself.
75 of those lines will be week-on/week-off
13.B.2.c. page 19 (PDF p171)
- 52.5-lines (75
min of 70) - Must have at least 5-days off in between
trips. - Max of 4-trips per Bid Period
So out of 90-lines that have night flying in
them, a min of 52.5 will be as close to true
Week-On/Week-Off flying as well get. Thats
really only around of 58.3..... Not the TA
language of 100. Not 85 as the 7/3/06 Flight
Times article or road shows have advertised
will be week-on/off. Based on 100 total
layover lines (no turns, etc), it drops to
46.4... True week-on/week-off
Although if you count the other lines noted above
to the right (17.5-lines the inferred 25),
it does raise it to 70 of ALL lines (in this
example) will fly 4-trips or less per BP
(Excludes reserves and hot standby) ADD Turns
back into the bid package (lets say 20-turns)
and the OVERALL number of lines w/4-trips or
less in a BP drops back down to 58.3.
12How DHL handles a 28-day periodand
week-on/week-off flying
DHLs Section 25.C.1.c on page 90
This means that all known flying is basically
week-on/week-off type of flying.
13Heres a quick cheat sheet on what line building
in 13B should produce for 3 of those 4
combination of lines
Simple math and lines
- Anything goes flying You can work up to every
week mixed with day night mixed with day
Turns and/or night Turns. These are your Base
Trip Lines - Night ONLY flying with 4 trips or less per bid
period These are your EDW Lines. - Day ONLY flying up to every week per bid period.
These are your Non-EDW lines. - Pure Turn lines -- Pure day or pure Night (THESE
ARE NOT SHOWN).
Well use a simple 100 layover lines for the math
14100 LAYOVER lines both day and night. NO turns,
Hots, etc.
Day ONLY flying
90 lines (Hypothetical)
10 NON-edw lines (Hypothetical) Max of 15-trips
in a Bid Period
20 max
80 min
18 Base Trip Lines (20 of 90 18) Mix of
everything
72 lines with 4 or less trips (80 of 90
72) Night ONLY flying
9-lines
60 min
9-lines
40 max
50 long block of days-off (3-wks of flying/PPD)
50 SHORT block of days-off (4-wks of flying/PPD)
6-lines
4-lines
50 long block of days-off (3-wks of flying/PPD)
50 SHORT block of days-off (4-wks of flying/PPD)
75 min
25 max
54-lines
18-lines
Week-on/off
4-trips per BP
- Mix of everything in Base Trip Lines
- This is a mix of just that everything.
- Day with night (possibly with ONLY 18-hrs off in
between) - Turns (day /or night)
15Another item that affect our lines
- Hard Cap (AKA Construction Cap)
16Pseudo Hard Caps at FDX
FDX section 25.D1.b on page 166 of PDF document
- FDX uses a TAFB limit as one of their pseudo Hard
Cap rules. - 313-hrs divided by our trip rig equals 83.5-hrs
per 4-week pay period domestic or international - UPS hard cap is 86-hrs domestic and 89.6-hrs
Internationally. 15-day trips can still be
built. - Another rule a FDX that is used as a pseudo hard
cap requires that the highest credit line cannot
exceed 8.5-hrs greater than the lowest credit
line. (See FDX Sec 25.D.1.b. page 167 of their
PDF doc) - I.e. If 68-hrs was there lowest credit line,
then the highest credit line cannot be greater
than 76.5-hrs. - We did not acquire either.
- Both would have helped promote hiring and
upgrades like at FDX. Quality of life issues? - Maybe thats why they have pilots hired in 2001
becoming captains. That pilot will make roughly
250,000 more before one of our pilots hired the
same year (upgrade at UPS based on historical
data. It takes 10-yrs to upgrade). That is
another quality of life issue.
17The New Lines and Hiring
- Just because we added new lines to a bid package,
it doesnt mean we have to hire. - As our negotiating committee chairman said on the
back page of the 07-03-06 IPA Flight times
Well, there is no doubt that the Company has
received gains that cost us bodies in certain
areas. Among these are extended deadheads into
theater, moving summer vacations out to the
shoulders of the summer months to reduce their
needs for crews in the Summer Peak, increased
reserve flexibility. Especially in bases like MIA
where B reserves are currently almost useless to
them, and the use of first officers as IROs on
the MD-11. There are more. - These reductions will reduce the number of pilots
needed. Instead of furloughing these pilots, UPS
will use them to fill the extra lines created.
Therefore it will also reduce the number of
pilots that UPS has to hire. - As an aside, did you know that FDX pilots build
their lines and NOT management? - Management build the trips.
- Click ahead to see how these extra pilots (gains
that cost us bodies) are used to offset IPA
gains.
18Example
100-lines total
60 Hard Lines
40 Reserve Lines
- With the new rules, lets say we increase the
number of Hard Lines by 10-lines.
That would be a 10 increase to
the overall number of Hard Lines 10 more crews
right? - Click ahead/advance the slide
10 NEW Lines
60 Hard Lines
40 Reserve Lines
- Thats 110-lines, BUT with the new rules,
including but not limited to reserve, UPS can now
reduce the number of reserve lines. Reserves
will be MORE productive (fly more) and dependable
in the future and UPS will be able to reduce that
number if they want to.
Thats why UPS wanted and/or agreed to the
reserve language we see in our TA today.
- This means that UPS can increase the number of
Hard Lines and reduce (the x above) the number
of reserve Lines to end up with the same
100-lines we started with.
Thus, NO Hiring. or at least
reduced/slow hiring.
10 NEW Lines
60 Hard Lines
30 Rsrv Lines
100-lines total
19In the new lines being built for this TA
- Please keep in mind that UPS has continued to
grow since 9/11. UPS has stated upwards of 12
in their magazine. - They also havent hired very many pilots these
last several years. In fact, theyve only hired
enough to really cover attrition, maybe added
about 50-pilots (28 based on the info below). - 2,727 IPA members on property as of the 2-1-06
seniority list published by UPS. - 248 of them are 59-yrs of age or older.
- UPS has hired 276 during the last 4.5-years
(based on 2-1-06 sr list). - 276 248 28
- This means that they are optimizing your
schedules (more work per pilot). Therefore any
change to TODAYs schedules will present a
positive change. Make the changes look better
than they really are.
- I would scrutinize the bid packages with the
thoughts of - Is this the worst case scenario?
- Will the new flying (Postal contract, MENLO,
etc.) dramatically change our network and how we
fly today as compared to this rebuilt TA bid
package? - How much flying will be moved/migrate from SDF
(Z, MD11, 747) and ONT to an ANC base? - Where are the loopholes that mitigate what we are
being presented as a sample bid package? - Are we only getting back to what UPS scheduled
several years ago? - UPS is not as ignorant as many of you think,
theyve been negotiating for almost 100-years. - They havent hired much so they could optimize
our schedules and then have us compare those
schedules to something that really on gets us
back to how UPS scheduled in 2000 maybe 2003. - It is kind of like a prisoner asking for pillow
over a period of 4-years.
Finally a brick is given to him.
He thanks them for the lovely pillow and
means it.
19
20Less Days on Duty?
- The IPA is proud to announce we have to work one
less day on average in a 56-day Bid Period. - Current bid packages have data readily available
for us to see if this does anything, just look at
- pages 3 or 4. For ease of reading UPS uses per
pay period in their data, BUT by contract and
past practice it is solely based upon per BID
PERIOD Meaning that you can exceed the prorated
13.5-days per 28-day PPD. This practice has not
changed under the new TA rules. - Either way, youll notice that we already meet
this new language. The MD11 is the exception
under their optimized schedules, lack of staffing
and growth. It has 27.2 avg days in a Bid
Period. - In other words, dont expect more days off.
Furthermore, you should be aware that the
language being announced as a gain is really only
a gain on paper. It doesnt do anything for you
in the real world. These are the gains we have
to look for and scrutinize. - What did we trade/give-away for this?
Art 13.B.1.c(1) on page 16 (PDF p.167)
period.
- The bid packages break this down per pay period
thus, for comparison think a max of 13.5 duty
days in a pay period. Click ahead to see an
excerpt from our actual bid package.
2005 2006 Averages are already less than 13.5.
21For more information on Scheduling
- Please visit
- http//IPAonTop.org
Domestic and International Rules
(Duty, Rest, etc Including
FDX examples) How many times have we heard The
lines looked great, but it was actually a killer.
22We the membership are.
The End
- Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
- -- Juvenal
Setting high expectations is key to achieving
success. Limited expectations yield only limited
results. Unknown author
Knowledge is our strength unity, our spirit.