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        You are here: Home / Archives for ELOA

        AFA Update – March 19, 2021

        March 19, 2021 17:00

        In This Edition

        • How the First Amendment Applies in the Workplace
        • Benefits Enrollment Upon Returning from a Leave of Absence (including EVF or ELOA)
        • What’s the Difference Between a Fear and a Phobia?
        • REMINDER: Scholarship Opportunities

        How the First Amendment Applies in the Workplace

        Grievance Committee

        The Grievance Committee is hearing a lot of chatter from Flight Attendants believing they are exempt from discipline from harassment or discrimination due to their First Amendment rights of freedom of speech and freedom of religion.  We’d like to give a brief overview of how the Amendment actually affects one who works for a private employer such as Alaska Airlines.

        The First Amendment of the United States Constitution prevents the government from making laws which regulate an establishment of religion, or that would prohibit the free exercise of religion, or abridge the freedom of speech, the freedom of the press, the freedom of assembly, or the right to petition the government for redress of grievances. It was adopted on December 15, 1791, as one of the ten amendments that constitute the Bill of Rights.

        The key word in the Amendment is government.  Alaska Airlines is a private rather than governmental employer.  It can legally establish system regulations or people policies enforcing its behavioral and disciplinary standards providing these policies do not violate state and/or federal law.  

        Present federal law protections from discrimination regarding employment decisions are based on race, color, national origin, religion, gender (including pregnancy), disability, age (if the employee is at least 40 years old), and citizenship status.  The Equality Act is also adding protections based on one’s sexual orientation and gender identity.  These protections safeguard people who fit those categories from being discriminated against regarding employment decisions based on that status.  For example, Alaska Airlines couldn’t refuse to hire an otherwise qualified candidate only because s/he is 41 years of age.  

        What the law doesn’t allow for is using your protected status as a defense to harass or discriminate against others.  For example, someone over 40 years of age may not harass another person based on their race because they believe themselves to be an “old school thinker” and are basing their actions on beliefs/feelings from when they were younger or when things “were different.”  This becomes an issue of harassment and/or discrimination and the harasser is not protected from discipline because they fall into the protected class of age.  This applies to all protected classes. 

        The Alaska Airlines People Policy clarifies what constitutes harassment and discrimination, and the Grievance Committee has seen the Company discipline based upon those policies and the law.  While one may not intend to harass or discriminate, Alaska Airlines typically looks at the impact on the person being harassed and not the intent of the harasser.  So, while everyone is entitled to their private opinion or to share their opinion with their government, one can be disciplined for sharing an opinion deemed harassing, discriminatory or intolerant in the workplace or via social media if such nexus can be made to your private employer.  We share this information in the attempt to educate our fellow members and prevent any further discipline or terminations.

        Questions?

        Please contact your Local Grievance Committee if you have any questions.


        Benefits Enrollment Upon Returning from a Leave of Absence (including EVF or ELOA)

        Benefits Committee

        As a reminder, Flight Attendants returning from a leave of absence, including EVF or ELOA, must complete the enrollment process again in order to maintain or reinstate company health benefits.  Optional coverages which were not in place during the leave such as FSA contributions or Supplemental Short-Term Disability must be re-added to your coverage.  Previously elected benefits do not resume automatically.  It is essential to contact Alaska Airlines Benefits at (844) 231-3476 or visit www.myalaskabenefits.com within 31 days from the date of returning to work to verify, enroll or make changes to benefits.  If enrollment is not completed during this window, no changes are able to be made until the next open enrollment period and your current health benefits may terminate, even if you maintained coverage during your EVF or other leave. 

        Questions?

        If you have any questions or need assistance, please contact your Local Benefits Committee.


        What’s the Difference Between a Fear and a Phobia?

        Employee Assistance Program (EAP)/Professional Standards Committee

        Phobias come in many different forms. Acrophobia is the fear of heights. Trypanophobia is the fear of needles. Hodophobia is the fear of traveling.  Phobias are one of the most common mental health disorders with 11% of people experiencing at least one phobia over her/his lifespan.  So, what is the difference between a fear and a phobia? 

        Fears have a protective purpose.  They make us alert to danger and prepare us to deal with it.  Phobias involve the experience of persistent fear that is excessive and unreasonable. A fear of being hit by lightning during a thunderstorm will result in most of us leaving the beach when a thunderstorm pops up. Most would call this a reasonable, if not healthy fear.  Once the thunderstorm clears, we go back onto the beach.  Those with a phobia about being struck by lightning, which is called astraphobia, may find it difficult to even venture outside with a concern that a thunderstorm could pop up anytime.   The key to distinguishing a fear from a phobia is whether the person is physically and/or psychologically impaired by her/his worry.  In short, a phobia is a fear of being afraid. It results in a person limiting or eliminating normal life activities just to avoid the triggering objector event.  

        Most people generally don’t seek treatment for phobias. Only 6% of people with a phobia ever go in for treatment.  This low treatment rate is due in part because those with a phobia are not totally disabled by it. Many are able to successfully create routines to avoid their trigger(s).  Not before a person’s phobia is extremely severe or life limiting does one typically seek help.

        Even though phobias can be very disabling and downright exhausting, the great news is that phobias in children, adolescents and adults are also very treatable. If you’d like confidential assistance with a phobia or other anxiety disorders, call one of your Local EAP Committee Members. You can find contact information on the EAP Committee page of afaalaska.org.


        REMINDER: Scholarship Opportunities

        AFA International

        In a previous AFA Update sent out on January 22, information was shared about scholarship opportunities available to AFA and CWA Members as well as certain eligible dependents.  Details about both scholarships, as well as information on how to apply, can be found by following the links below. 

        AFA Scholarship Fund

        The Association of Flight Attendants Scholarship Fund is intended to provide financial assistance to dependents of our active members who will be attending a college or university.  The deadline for applications is April 10.  Details are available on the AFA International website at http://www.afacwa.org/scholarships.

        CWA Joe Beirne Scholarship

        The Joe Beirne Scholarship is offered by CWA. The deadline for applications is April 30.   Details on this scholarship are on the CWA website at http://www.cwa-union.org/pages/beirne.

        Filed Under: Benefits Committee, EAP/Professional Standards Committee, Grievance Committee, Latest News, Master Executive Council (MEC) Tagged With: 2021, Benefits, ELOA, EVF, First Amendment, LOA, scholarship

        Reduction in Force Part 7

        August 14, 2020 14:15

        This is the seventh in a series of “Reduction in Force” (RIF) communications from the Master Executive Council (MEC). See RIF Part 1, RIF Part 2, RIF Part 3, RIF Part 4, RIF Part 5, and RIF Part 6 for the previous editions.

        In This Edition

        • COVID-19 Pandemic Impact to Staffing
        • Early Out and Other Furlough Mitigation Awards
        • Involuntary Furloughs
        • Systemwide Vacancy Bid?
        • Payroll Support Program Extension

        COVID-19 Pandemic Impact to Staffing

        The COVID-19 pandemic has had an unprecedented impact on staffing. Over the past several months, approximately 70% (~4200 out of 5968) of Alaska Airlines Flight Attendants have been on some form of pandemic-related leave of absence or reduced hours line. This includes school/childcare closure leaves; high-risk or self-isolation leaves; directed isolation or quarantine leaves; work-related exposure leaves; capacity reduction leaves; and voluntary low bid (reduced hours) lines. That is over 70% of Flight Attendants whose paychecks and livelihoods have been directly affected by this pandemic, which is not even factoring in the impact to the entire group through reduction of the line average to the contractual minimum.


        Early Out and Other Furlough Mitigation Awards

        With regard to Early Outs (EOs), Extended Leaves of Absence (ELOAs) and Enhanced Voluntary Furloughs (EVFs):

        • Total bids: ~2,900
        • Total awards: ~2,500
        • EOs awarded: 200
        • ELOAs awarded: 50
        • EVFs awarded: 2,250
        • Total denied: ~400

        Management has stated that the denied furlough mitigation bid requests are to prevent excessively imbalanced staffing between the domiciles. The Master Executive Council (MEC) has reviewed numerous iterations of potential awards, and we can validate that the complex interplay between occupational seniority, domicile assignment, leave duration and base guarantee requirements lead to vastly different outcomes depending on how many of each type of furlough mitigation are awarded. Candidly, there was no potential award that felt good to the MEC for various reasons. Although we are extremely disappointed that not all furlough mitigation bids were awarded, this final award is the least objectionable—call it the best of a really, really bad situation.


        Involuntary Furloughs

        We regret to inform you that management intends to involuntarily furlough approximately 400 Flight Attendants effective October 1, 2020. This affects the junior quarter of the April 16, 2018 Initial Training class and all Flight Attendants junior to them. Management will begin involuntary furlough (IVF) notifications starting next week via certified mail at current mailing addresses on file with the Company and via Company email. Management will also host an online IVF information session the week after, and MEC representatives will participate.

        Management also intends to recall many IVFs in October after a very short furlough—on the order of a few days. The MEC understands these October recalls will be based most likely in Seattle, Anchorage or Portland in order to “right size” the operation. We are already working with management to develop a domicile preference bid form for IVF recalls as soon as possible. Involuntary furloughs will have access to all reduction in force contractual provisions, including severance pay and relocation benefits as applicable. Management is not committing to this, but the MEC believes there is a very good chance that all IVFs will be recalled by March 2021 based on the staffing projections we have seen; however, these projections are subject to change.


        Systemwide Vacancy Bid?

        Will there be a systemwide vacancy bid (sometimes called a “master re-bid” on the line) in which everyone rebids for a domicile? Management seems to believe that recalling the involuntary furloughs to specific domiciles will adequately balance the operation for now, but they have not ruled out a systemwide vacancy bid in the future. AFA disputes management’s position that it may unilaterally impose a systemwide vacancy bid under these circumstances, and we fully intend to file a contractual grievance and push for expedited arbitration if management decides to move forward with such a bid.

        For some historical perspective, there have been only two systemwide vacancy bids: once in the mid-90s to correct seniority violations as a result of imposed work rules during contract negotiations and again in 2011 to correct seniority violations and to right size LAX as a result of a preceding reduction in force. Both scenarios involved discussion and concurrence from AFA and management prior to proceeding.


        Payroll Support Program Extension

        Although Congress has technically recessed for now, work to extend the Payroll Support Program (PSP) continues in earnest during the recess. If PSP were to be extended at any point and involuntary furloughs subsequently prohibited, AFA and management would meet and confer over any necessary changes to furlough mitigations and involuntary furloughs pursuant to the October 2020 Involuntary Furlough Mitigations Letter of Agreement. Realistically, that would likely lead to discussion regarding voluntary leave programs similar to those offered over the last five months.


        These are extremely difficult and stressful times. Please remember that your AFA Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Committee is always available as a support resource. As your direct representative on the MEC, your LEC president is available to answer questions or concerns that you may have about all the information presented here. Contact information for your respective LEC president can be found by clicking here.

        Filed Under: Latest News Tagged With: 2020, ELOA, enhanced voluntary furlough, EVF, extended leave of absence, involuntary furlough, IVF, Payroll Support Program, reduction in force, RIF

        Reduction in Force Part 5

        July 30, 2020 21:15

        This is the fifth in a series of “Reduction in Force” (RIF) communications from the Master Executive Council (MEC). See RIF Part 1, RIF Part 2, RIF Part 3 and RIF Part 4 for the previous editions.

        In This Edition

        • Voluntary Permanent Transfers and Temporary Base Trades
        • Furlough Mitigation Clarifications
        • Dues Obligation

        Voluntary Permanent Transfers and Temporary Base Trades

        Voluntary Permanent Transfers

        Flight Attendants may voluntarily transfer to a new domicile while on an Extended Leave of Absence (ELOA) or Enhanced Voluntary Furlough (EVF) by participating in vacancy bids pursuant to §28.C [Vacancy Bids] and §28.D [Standing Bid Awards…]. See also “October 2020 Involuntary Furlough Mitigations LOA” §II.A.3 and §II.B.4 for more information.

        Temporary Base Trades (“Swaps”)

        Flight Attendants on ELOA retain the ability to temporarily trade (“swap”) bases pursuant to §28.A.9 [Rules Governing Multiple Domiciles]. Flight Attendants on an EVF may finish out the term of an existing swap but may not renew the swap or enter into a new swap. A base swap is terminated if either of the Flight Attendants are involuntarily furloughed, and both are returned to their respective domiciles; however, Flight Attendants on involuntary furlough are not guaranteed to return to their domicile when recalled.


        Furlough Mitigation Clarifications

        Master Executive Council (MEC) representatives have been working with management to identify some lingering furlough mitigation questions. The following topics are being addressed by management in a communication issued tonight.

        • Maternity and Other Medical Leaves
        • Medical Coverage if 480 TFP is Met While on a Leave of Absence
        • Reciprocal Alaska & Horizon Jumpseat Privileges

        Dues Obligation

        In accordance with the AFA-CWA Constitution & Bylaws every Flight attendant on a leave of absence owes dues for the first three months of their leave of absence after their compensation from the airline ends. This obligation includes Extended Leaves of Absence and Enhanced Voluntary Furloughs. However, Flight attendants on involuntary furlough (or a military leave) do not owe this amount.

        Article XI A.6. Payment of dues shall be required of all members that are on active status during a month or any portion thereof. After the first ninety (90) days of removal from service and no longer receiving compensation through a carrier for disability leave, payment of dues shall not be required.

        AFA-CWA Constitution & Bylaws

        Example: Voluntary furlough begins on October 1. You would owe dues for October, November and December. If dues are payroll deducted for any of these months, it will be applied to this 90-day leave obligation.

        Click here for AFA-CWA Membership Services >


        Coming Soon

        • WARN Notices

        These are extremely difficult and stressful times. Please remember that your Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Committee is always available as a support resource. As your direct representative on the MEC, your LEC president is available to answer questions or concerns that you may have about all the information presented here. Contact information for your respective LEC president can be found by clicking here.

        Filed Under: Latest News Tagged With: 2020, dues, ELOA, enhanced voluntary furlough, EVF, extended leave of absence, furlough, involuntary furlough, IVF, reduction in force, RIF

        Reduction in Force Part 4

        July 29, 2020 19:00

        This is the fourth in a series of “Reduction in Force” communications from the Master Executive Council (MEC). See “Reduction in Force Part 1,” “Reduction in Force Part 2,” and “Reduction in Force Part 3” for the previous editions.

        In This Edition

        • Avoiding Involuntary Furlough: Extend the CARES Act Payroll
        • How Many Furlough Mitigation Applicants are Needed to Avoid Involuntary Furlough?
        • Can I Avoid Involuntary Furlough by Applying for an Extended Leave of Absence or Enhanced Voluntary Furlough?
        • Order of Recall

        Avoiding Involuntary Furloughs: Extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program

        The single most impactful thing that you can do to completely avoid involuntary furloughs (IVFs) in October would be for you, your family members and your friends to contact Congress and demand our legislators extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program.

        We need urgent action on this now and every day in July:

        1. Call your Representative and Senators. Flight Attendants, family and friends should make three calls every day: two to the Senate line and one to the House line.
        2. Sign this letter to your Representative and Senators >
        3. Tell five flying partners and your friends and family to do the same!

        House: 888-907-9365 |Senate: 888-848-4824

        Sample Script:
        Hello, I am a constituent calling to ask [Representative] /[Senator] to help save my job as an essential worker. Take legislative action in July to extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program for aviation workers in order to avoid massive job loss in October. Keep us connected to our jobs, our paychecks, and our healthcare. Thank you for your urgent attention to this.


        How Many Furlough Mitigation Applicants are Needed to Avoid Involuntary Furlough?

        The MEC is currently estimating approximately 1900 to 2200 Flight Attendants are in the potential involuntary furlough range without any furlough mitigations. As of this writing, over 2300 Flight Attendants have bid for some form of furlough mitigation (e.g. Early Out, Extended Leave of Absence or Enhanced Voluntary Furlough). How many are needed to avoid involuntary furloughs (IVFs)?

        That is very difficult to project with any degree of certainty. Keep in mind that management believes the Company is under no obligation to award all furlough mitigations to the bottom of the list. The Master Executive Council (MEC) is confident management will award all EOs, but we’re less confident about all ELOAs and EVFs.

        Management is concerned about awarding all furlough mitigation bids because of the potential to significantly imbalance the domiciles depending on the number and duration of the respective furlough mitigations (e.g. ELOA-12, EVF-6, EVF-9, EVF-12 and EVF-15). If management were to cut off furlough mitigation awards prior to reaching the bottom of the bids, that could lead to IVFs. Relatively junior Flight Attendants who have applied for furlough mitigations would be converted to IVF if they are in the seniority range impacted by involuntary furlough. Therefore, one cannot assume that every application for furlough mitigation will actually reduce the number of involuntary furloughs in a one to one (1:1) ratio.


        Can I Avoid Involuntary Furlough by Applying for an Extended Leave of Absence or Enhanced Voluntary Furlough?

        No. There has been a lot confusion regarding ELOAs/EVFs and IVFs. Bidding for an EVF does not prevent you from being involuntarily furloughed. – Section 18.A.3

        If a Flight Attendant bids for an ELOA and/or an EVF and if her/his Occupational Seniority number is in the IVF seniority range, then the Flight Attendant will be converted to IVF. If management is forced to involuntarily furlough Flight Attendants, then the most junior Flight Attendant on the Occupational Seniority list will be listed as IVF; the process continues up the seniority list until a sufficient number of IVFs have been designated to meet staffing needs. In no circumstances will the most senior Flight Attendant on IVF have anyone junior to her or him designated as an active Flight Attendant or on ELOA or on EVF.


        Order of Recall

        Recall will be in the following order: (1) Involuntary Furloughs, (2) Enhanced Voluntary Furloughs and (3) Extended Leaves of Absence.

        IVFs

        IVFs will be recalled first and offered in Occupational Seniority (system seniority) order; IVFs may bypass recall until no Flight Attendant is left junior to her/him amongst the IVFs.

        EVFs

        EVFs will be recalled second and offered in Occupational Seniority (system seniority) order irrespective of EVF duration; EVFs may bypass recall until no FA is left junior to her/him amongst the EVFs. EVFs are automatically recalled at the conclusion of their respective EVF duration (6, 9, 12 or 15 months).

        ELOAs

        ELOAs will be recalled third and offered in Occupational Seniority (system seniority) order. ELOAs may bypass recall until the end of their ELOA duration (12 months).


        Coming Soon

        • Base Swaps and Permanent Transfers
        • Dues Obligation

        These are extremely difficult and stressful times. Please remember that your Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Committee is always available as a support resource. As your direct representative on the MEC, your LEC president is available to answer questions or concerns that you may have about all the information presented here. Contact information for your respective LEC president can be found by clicking here.

        Filed Under: Latest News Tagged With: 2020, CARES Act, ELOA, enhanced voluntary furlough, EVF, extended leave of absence, furlough, involuntary furlough, IVF, recall

        Reduction in Force Part 3

        July 23, 2020 17:00

        This is the third in a series of “Reduction in Force” communications from the Master Executive Council (MEC). See “Reduction in Force Part 1” and “Reduction in Force Part 2” for the previous editions.

        In This Edition

        • Avoiding Involuntary Furloughs: Extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program
        • Staffing Projections From the All-Employee Webcast Explained

        Avoiding Involuntary Furloughs: Extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program

        The single most impactful thing that you can do to completely avoid involuntary furloughs (IVFs) in October would be for you, your family members and your friends to contact Congress and demand our legislators extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program.

        We need urgent action on this now and every day in July:

        1. Call your Representative and Senators. Flight Attendants, family and friends should make three calls every day: two to the Senate line and one to the House line.
        2. Sign this letter to your Representative and Senators >
        3. Tell five flying partners and your friends and family to do the same!

        House: 888-907-9365 | Senate: 888-848-4824

        Sample Script:
        Hello, I am a constituent calling to ask [Representative] /[Senator] to help save my job as an essential worker. Take legislative action in July to extend the CARES Act Payroll Support Program for aviation workers in order to avoid massive job loss in October. Keep us connected to our jobs, our paychecks, and our healthcare. Thank you for your urgent attention to this.


        Staffing Projections From the All-Employee Webcast Explained

        WARN Act Notices

        The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act helps ensure advance notice in cases of qualified mass layoffs. Management is required by law to provide “WARN notices” to employees who may be laid off (i.e. involuntarily furloughed). In all the states in which there are Flight Attendant domiciles (AK, WA, OR and CA), those notices must be sent no less than 60 days prior to the date of the involuntary furlough, or no later than August 1st for involuntary furloughs effective on October 1st.

        WARN notices provided to the union on behalf of affected employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement satisfies the WARN Act requirements except for in California, which also requires notices to be sent directly to the employee. As of today, AFA has not been provided with WARN notices, but we will advise membership as soon as the notice has been served.

        Management’s Projections and “Excess Employees” Explained

        On today’s all-employee webcast, management shared there would be 2500 “excess employees” in Inflight in October and that there are 1200 “volunteers to date” in Inflight. The Master Executive Council (MEC) understands that 2500 is the number of Flight Attendants who will receive WARN notices. That number of 2500 is inclusive of a buffer above the actual number of potential involuntary furloughs (IVFs) in order to assure the Company is in compliance with the WARN Act; it is not the actual number.

        AFA’s Interpretation of Management’s Projections

        The MEC is currently estimating approximately 1900 to 2200 Flight Attendants are in the potential involuntary furlough range without any furlough mitigations. At the time of the webcast, 1200 Flight Attendants had bid for some form of furlough mitigation (e.g. Early Out, Extended Leave of Absence or Enhanced Voluntary Furlough); that number has climbed to approximately 1300 since then. It would seem logical to estimate that we are somewhere between 600 and 900 Flight Attendants short of avoiding IVFs as of this writing, but that is not entirely accurate.

        Keep in mind that many relatively junior Flight Attendants have applied for various furlough mitigations. They would be converted to IVF if they are in the seniority range impacted by involuntary furlough. Therefore, one cannot assume that every application for furlough mitigation will actually reduce the number of involuntary furloughs in a one to one (1:1) ratio.


        Coming Soon

        • Order of Recall for IVF, EVF and ELOA
        • Dues Obligation During a Reduction in Force

        These are extremely difficult and stressful times. Please remember that your Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Committee is always available as a support resource. As your direct representative on the MEC, your LEC president is available to answer questions or concerns that you may have about all the information presented here. Contact information for your respective LEC president can be found by clicking here.

        Filed Under: Latest News Tagged With: 2020, CARES Act, early out, ELOA, enhanced voluntary furlough, EO, EVF, extended leave of absence, furlough, involuntary furlough

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