| 10.26.06 |
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This is Leslie Mayo, National Communications Coordinator, with the APFA Hotline for Thursday, October 26, 2006. APFA News: APFA and AA announced on Monday a reciprocal cabin seat agreement with jetBlue Airways effective November 1, 2006. This brings to four the number of airlines available to AA and American Eagle Flight Attendants that may be utilized for free travel in an available cabin seat. It is very important that you visit the APFA Web site and click on Reciprocal Agreements to review the rules and guidelines governing this new agreement between AA and JetBlue before attempting to travel. Please remember that this agreement can be eliminated by either party. From the Joint Business Teams of Miami and San Francisco: The Attendance Control Policy (ACP) is an American Airlines corporate policy. It is not contractual for our workgroup or any other workgroup on AA’s property. APFA continuously encourages AA to enhance its ACP to make it more user-friendly for our members. Over the past several months, the joint APFA/Flight Service Business teams in Miami and San Francisco have been working to design a test that will address some of APFA’s and the Company’s concerns with regard to the current ACP. In particular, both parties are hopeful that this test will assist Flight Attendants in taking control of and self-managing their attendance. The teams analyzed the American Airlines policy as well as attendance policies at other carriers for comparison purposes. This attendance test will run for six months beginning November 1, 2006, and will apply to those FAs based in Miami and San Francisco throughout the test period. It will be operated locally and labor and management representatives will meet monthly to monitor the test. Once the test period ends in May 2007, APFA and Flight Service will review the data from the program and its effect on flight attendants in MIA and SFO to determine whether it will continue, and whether it will be applied system wide. Flight attendants will be able to find more information beginning November 1st on the local Miami and San Francisco base Web sites at apfa.org, and aaflightservice.com. Each MIA, IMA, SFO and SFO-I flight attendant will also receive a booklet explaining the test policy in detail in your Flight Service mailbox shortly. From the Contract Department: Last week, we issued an alert regarding the accrual of vacation and sick time. As a reminder, each year, a number of Flight Attendants will fall short of the 420-hour threshold and not accrue vacation or sick time. Some of our members miss this cut-off by only a few hours. In some instances, flying one or two extra trips might make the difference in full accrual vs. no accrual. Further, some Flight Attendants will end up in an overpayment status if they used PVDs during the year and subsequently had no accrual. Now would be the perfect time to review your HISK, particularly if you fly low-time, in order to ensure you are on track in meeting your accrual threshold. You can find a summary of your hours at the bottom of your HISK. Please refer to the Contract Department article in the 3rd quarter ‘05 issue of Skyword for a more detailed explanation of Vacation and Sick Accrual. You can access previous issues of Skyword on the APFA Web site. From the Health Department: As a continued reminder, Health Benefits Enrollment must be completed by October 31, 2006. We urge you to visit the APFA Web site and review the comparison chart that includes the differences between the contractually-protected Standard Health (PPO) Plan, aka 80/20 Plan, and the company-sponsored Point of Service (POS) Plan for the 2007 benefit year. The chart was compiled by APFA, with the assistance of The Segal Company, an outside benefits consulting group. |
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