Court Update From Trustee – May 21, 2025

Allegiant Pilots,

Today, after two days of testimony, Judge Gordon issued a Preliminary Injunction against the union, preventing us from striking or performing any work action. The judge, familiar with Allegiant, deferred to the FAA POI’s “Acceptance” of the Temporary Bulletin change issued by the company.

The Union disagrees with the POI and continues to believe that the revised bulletin is non-compliant with the FARs and FAA interpretations of Pilot Rest. However, the judge seemed to understand the dispute and issues created regarding the pilots’ new obligations to the company. In the company’s testimony today, the company stated multiple times that pilots are not required to be contactable on days off or during their rest period. As a mitigation to the new GOM provisions, the judge suggested that Allegiant pilots could get “burner phones” and provide those numbers to Allegiant. This would allow us to take advantage of our negotiated days off and regulatory rest.

For now, regarding the two items in dispute in the GOM Revision 66, we are prohibited from any strike or other work action. Additionally, union officials are barred from either encouraging, promoting, or calling for any type of strike or work stoppage. It’s imperative that the pilots follow this court order.

We will schedule a call for Saturday to answer questions.

Fraternally,

Greg Unterseher
Trustee, APA Teamsters Local 2118

PILOT MEETING RESCHEDULED

Fellow Pilots,

Due to a court appearance this afternoon, we will need to reschedule today’s webinar.

The meeting has been moved to next week—please see the updated Zoom details below.

PILOT MEETING RESCHEDULED

Pilot Meeting; Zoom Meetings – REGISTER

Join us for an all-pilot call on Tuesday, May 27th, at 3 PM Pacific Time.

 

Fraternally,

Greg Unterseher
Trustee, APA Teamsters Local 2118

Trustee Update May 19, 2025

Allegiant Pilots,

On May 15, our counsel wrote to Allegiant informing it of a major dispute regarding the implementation of GOM revisions related to duty and rest that altered its status quo obligations under the RLA. We gave the company until 10 AM PT Friday, May 16th, to respond. Through a series of conversations between our counsel and the company’s counsel, Allegiant withdrew implementation until 5 PM tonight. The company then issued a new proposed revision to the GOM and stated it would implement at 5 PM tonight. The company filed a temporary restraining order last night to enjoin us from striking over the status quo violations at 5 PM tonight.

This morning, Allegiant and union counsel met with US District Judge Andrew Gordon via Zoom, and an in-person hearing was initially set for 2 PM this afternoon because Allegiant initially refused to withdraw its GOM language change. An hour and a half before the hearing, Allegiant agreed to withdraw implementation of its GOM revision and to preserve the status quo until the later of 5:00 PM PT on May 20, 2025, or the close of the evidentiary hearing on Allegiant’s TRO, but in any event, no longer than 5:00 PM PT on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. With this stipulation to maintain the status quo, a hearing on Allegiant’s TRO has been rescheduled for 2 PM PT tomorrow.

By its GOM changes, Allegiant management has made it clear that they intend to unilaterally implement new rules and working conditions that require you to a) monitor communications for company contact on your days off, b) respond to the company’s communications on days off, and c) check your schedule to determine when such a response would not be in violation of “required rest”.

As we have seen from the company recently, they attempt to dictate work rules and terms of employment that they can’t obtain in  negotiations. Their arrogant and self-serving conduct brings us to the brink of a status quo strike. We have included a memo  linked below that outlines the two different kinds of disputes under the RLA, major and minor.

Per the FAA’s guidance on duty and rest requirements, Allegiant’s requirement that you constantly monitor your communications for any contact is a duty. Allegiant’s requirement that you respond to telephone calls off-duty is a duty. What’s more, Allegiant attempts to shift the burden onto the pilot, making it mandatory to check their schedule and determine when a callback would not interfere with “required rest.” This is a duty, regardless of how permissible the callback period is.

Further, the FAA makes clear that if a pilot is not “free from all restraint to the carrier”, then the period of obligation is not considered rest. Per our CBA, a Rest Period is “[t]he time between Duty Off and the subsequent Duty On time.” Per the FAA, a Rest Period is “a continuous period determined prospectively during which the flight crewmember is free from all restraint by the certificate holder, including freedom from present responsibility for work should the occasion arise.” The CBA and FAA provisions are not mutually exclusive, they work in concert with each other. During your rest period, the CBA requires that you are free of duty and the FAA demands that you are free from duty. Otherwise, it’s not rest.

Multiple FAA Interpretations make this clear and unimpeachable, especially this one from June 16th, 2009:

“…if the pilot is obligated to answer the telephone, or respond to a page, then the entire period that the pilot is under such an obligation is not considered part of the continuous rest period, even if the carrier does not call the pilot once during that period.” 

The FAA confirmed this position in a July 8th, 2014 interpretation letter which states:

“We noted further that “a requirement to check a schedule or acknowledge a trip assignment is duty and not rest even when the requirement is imposed by a collective bargaining agreement.” 

The FAA stated the same regarding “rest period obligations” in a July 5th, 2008 interpretation, stating:

 “…by threatening adverse action if the pilot did not respond, [the company] indicated that it expected its pilot to answer the telephone and/or respond… thus the period during which the pilot was under this obligation would not be considered part of the rest period.” 

The FAA could not be clearer regarding the definitions of Duty and of Rest. The company’s unilateral changes constitute a status quo violation, a contract violation, and a clear conflict and/or violation of the FARs.

Should Allegiant exercise self-help and make changes to the status quo, the Union will also exercise its right to legal self-help and strike the carrier. There is a stipulation in place to maintain the status quo until the later of 5:00 PM PT on May 20, 2025, or the close of the evidentiary hearing on Allegiant’s TRO, but in any event, no longer than 5:00 PM PT on Wednesday, May 21, 202, The Union and pilots will honor this status quo agreement.

Our CBA protects pilots from discipline, termination, and replacement for participating in lawful strikes such as a status quo strike. Section 1.K.3 states: it shall not be cause for discharge, permanent replacement or any other disciplinary action if any Pilot covered by this Agreement:

 “…refuses to enter upon the property of the Company, any Company Affiliate or any other Entity where its employees are engaged in a lawful strike…” 

The Union will take all legal action necessary to protect pilots from retaliation from exercising their contractual and statutory rights. The company’s proposed changes to the GOM are unlawful. If Allegiant management implements the GOM changes, it will have resorted to self-help before the RLA processes have been exhausted, which constitutes a status quo violation under the RLA. The Union will take all legal steps to defend our CBA and maintain the status quo, including exercising our legal-right to self help and strike the carrier should it be required. For now, please maintain the status quo.

Memo Status Quo 05.19.2025

We will update you on this matter following tomorrow’s hearing in Federal Court.

Fraternally,

Greg Unterseher
Trustee, APA Teamsters Local 2118

Strike Preparation: What You and Your Family Need to Know

Fellow Allegiant Pilots,

This update includes critical information from your Strategic Preparedness Committee. Please take a moment to read the Families & Finances update below and click through for the full briefing on our website.

FAMILIES & FINANCES

Preparation doesn’t end on the flight line—it continues at home. Your family plays a vital role in ensuring our unity stays strong. Supporting one another through financial readiness and awareness is key.

Highlights:

  • Teamcare health insurance will remain intact for you and eligible family during a strike. No premiums will be required.
  • Strike benefits from the IBT Strike Fund will provide weekly payments to members in good standing.
  • Begin budgeting now. Look back over your last year of expenses and plan to reduce discretionary spending.
  • Consider applying for a HELOC while employed, reducing 401k contributions to build cash, and reviewing credit options with union-friendly benefits.

A well-prepared household means fewer vulnerabilities the company can exploit—and a stronger union ready to hold the line.

FAMILIES & FINANCES UPDATE (PDF)

This update includes critical information from your Strategic Preparedness Committee. Please take a moment to read through.

In Unity,

Aaron Adrian
SPC Chairman
APA Teamsters Local 2118

Strike On Hold

Reorganizing for Strength!


Strike Update: May 16, 2025

Allegiant Pilots,

In response to our imminent threat of a strike, Allegiant has agreed to withdraw enforcement of the offending GOM provisions, without prejudice, until at least 5:00 PM on Monday, May 19th, 2025. Until that time, the Union will not exercise its legal right to self-help and will not strike the carrier. Should this time not secure a lawful resolution, the Union reserves the right to exercise self-help and strike the carrier, if necessary, to defend our CBA and restore the status quo.

On the precipice of a lawful strike, with our pilots standing in solidarity, Allegiant management has backed down and temporarily withheld implementation of its unilateral changes to the GOM. Less than 14 hours away from a coordinated effort to exercise our right to self-help and strike the carrier, management has confirmed that they will withhold the implementation and application of the offending GOM policies, specifically those regarding perpetual accessibility and return contact obligations, that would have constituted an unlawful, unilateral change to rules and working conditions—a violation of the status quo under the Railway Labor Act (RLA).

Among other things, those policies attempted to impose a perpetual obligation on our pilots to remain “accessible” and contactable to Flight Operations, whether on or off duty. This is in direct conflict with our CBA and a unilateral change to the status quo not permissible per RLA Section 152, Seventh. Status quo violations are major disputes under the RLA and legal self-help action would be permitted if the policy was implemented.

Further, these new GOM provisions would not allow a pilot to be “free from all restraint from the carrier,” a statutory requirement for any off-duty periods to be considered rest.

In Summary

1. The enforcement of GOM provisions regarding accessibility and the obligation to return telephone calls of Flight Operations leadership have been temporarily withheld — you are not obligated to comply with those provisions.

2. The Union retains its legal right to strike if the Company resumes enforcement or fails to rescind the policy entirely.

Standing up for our contractual rights is both justified and required, especially considering present circumstances. This achievement, even if temporary, was thanks to your unity, decisiveness, and readiness to act. Allegiant management is fully aware that unilateral changes to pay, rules, or working conditions are a violation of federal law. Allegiant management must be aware that this Union is prepared to act lawfully and decisively to the maximum extent possible to protect our CBA and our members.

We will continue to provide updates as this situation develops. Be proud. You have again shown this management group that we will not stand for the violation of our rights nor our CBA.

Fraternally,

Greg Unterseher, Trustee
APA Teamsters Local 2118

Captain Aaron Adrian, SPC Chair


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Trustee Update May 15, 2025

Allegiant Pilots,

I know it’s been frustrating to watch the volley of attacks on your contract and representation. I’m surprised at the lengths that Allegiant is willing to go to create disruption: manufacturing terms that were not negotiated in your CBA, outright demonstrable fabrications to the NMB in its response to the union’s request for proffer, and using pilots and their families as fodder.

As frustrating as it is, it’s a heads-down, keep our eyes on the target moment.

We will be hosting a Zoom Webinar next Tuesday, May 20th, at 3 PM PT to discuss the current state of affairs and focus on the Bylaw referendum, Nomination Hearing, and Officer elections.

Link Here: WEBINAR

GOM Revision

The Union sent a letter to Allegiant today regarding its latest GOM revision. Please read the letter here: 2025.05.15 Letter to Fishburn re GOM

Ft Lauderdale

Mr. Fishburn responded to our letter inquiring when Allegiant will post a displacement bid for the FLL 320. Mr. Fishburn’s patronizing, wrong, and misleading reply can be read here: EMAIL 

A320 Pilots, you are NOT required to bid for a vacancy. We are filing a grievance in response to Mr. Fishburn’s response.

Bylaws

The referendum for the Bylaws was sent to your home this week. A link to the redline of the 2021 Bylaws can be found here.

Department of Labor, response to member questions

In the first week of April, the US Department of Labor Office of Labor-Management Standards was at the Local as part of an investigation of the local affairs under the removed officers and the reported loss of over one million dollars. The OLMS took possession of approximately 10 bankers’ boxes of records and documents that were responsive to its initial request.

The investigation is ongoing, and we anticipate that it will conduct several interviews and request additional documents and records. The investigation is in its early stages, but it remains very much in an active status. Local 2118 has also filed a claim with its fidelity bond insurance carrier regarding the more than $1 million loss described above. Finally, the former officers who were charged and found guilty of numerous violations of the IBT Constitution and Local 2118 Bylaws and ordered to repay the monies that were embezzled from the union have appealed those decisions to the IBT General Executive Board. The next IBT General Executive Board is scheduled to take place next month. The General Executive Board may decide the appeals at that June meeting.

Fraternally,

Greg Unterseher
Trustee, APA Teamsters Local 2118

SCOPE UPDATE from Education Committee

Reorganizing for Strength!


May 15, 2025

Fellow Pilots,

 

Good evening, once again. In our last communication, we started a discussion about scope. You can read that original message and join the ongoing discussion here, and read a brief FAQ about scope here. In this second installment about scope, we want to share more information about scope language that is common across pilot contracts, and why we should be concerned about the prospect of outsourcing here at Allegiant.

Your Education Committee conducted a lengthy review of pilot contracts at airlines in our industry – including Delta, United, Southwest, Alaska, and others. Most unionized pilots have scope language which protects pilots from companies setting up parallel “alter ego” airlines; they also typically have language which protects pilots from major transactions such as mergers, acquisitions, changes of control, and fragmentation of assets. First, the good news: your collective bargaining agreement with Allegiant also addresses these important topics.

Most pilot contracts also include scope language related to outsourcing. Most pilot contracts contain limitations on the total volume or share of flying which can be outsourced to other airlines. In contrast, paragraph 1.E.3 of our CBA with Allegiant simply says that “No Company Pilot…shall be involuntarily reduced in status or lose any income or employee benefits as a result of such wet lease or subcontracting.” You can see how this language may not entirely protect you from a situation where the company may decide to outsource future growth – and your work — to a third party.

Similarly, pilot CBAs typically include provisions related to joint ventures. For instance, the Alaska pilot CBA includes this language: “Joint Ventures are not permitted absent an agreement between the Company and the Association covering the terms and conditions under which Joint Venture flying will be performed, the balance or allocation of such flying between the Company and the foreign carrier, and any flying that will be performed by Pilots.” This language explicitly requires the company and the pilots to reach agreement about how much flying will be allocated and performed by the Alaska pilots.

As you know, our employer has entered into an agreement with Viva Aerobus, a Mexican airline. If this deal were to move forward, absent adequate scope protections, it is likely that a large share of the combined flying would be performed by Viva pilots, not by our association. This would have a very direct impact on your income and career expectations here at Allegiant. This would have especially grave consequences for first officers who would, as a result of outsourcing, be unlikely to upgrade to captain as quickly. As a union, we must stand together and prevent this outcome. We must obtain scope language which protects us from negative consequences from the deal with Viva. The urgency is clear and now is the time.

There are many other examples in the industry where pilots have been disadvantaged by inadequate scope protections. We encourage you to join the discussion online (APA Website Forum) and share your perspective with your fellow pilots.

If you are new to the subject of scope, and would like more information, please read the FAQ or reach out to the Education Committee or another union representative.

In Solidarity,

Your Education Committee


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Negotiating Committee – May 13, 2025

Reorganizing for Strength!


May 13, 2025

Fellow Pilots,

 

Allegiant’s Proffer Response Letter

As you are aware, Allegiant management sent the National Mediation Board (NMB) their response to the Union’s request for a proffer of arbitration. The document is full of startling admissions and outright fabrications. Allegiant’s arrogance and hubris remains unmatched. Mr. Fishburn asserts that the Union would produce a lengthy diatribe in response; their fabrication-ladened letter ensures no such response is necessary.

Their submission amounted to an unsubstantiated, 5-page complaint form, in which they could provide no evidence – based rebuttal of the Union’s factful and data-driven analysis on the issue of unstacking. Their silence on the core issue was an admission to our pilots and the NMB that the Union is correct when it comes to the existence of an impasse on unstacking, which has caused a total breakdown in negotiations. Management’s “4D” playbook of delay, deflect, discredit, and deceive hardly makes worthwhile reading material, much less changes the facts on the ground:

The company’s bargaining positions are extreme, concessionary, not operationally necessary, well outside of industry standards, and are proposed specifically to avoid agreement. The company has not provided ANY factual, data-driven, or evidence-based rebuttal to the contrary.

Management clearly admitted a preference for certain negotiators and representatives in the Union—an unprecedented admission of their attempts to influence and gain control over the Union, the Negotiating Committee, and our bargaining priorities. They have erased any reasonable doubt of their continued attempts to interfere and influence Union affairs, exactly as we previously stated. They continue to disparage the experience of those who hold them accountable at the bargaining table and while insisting they have the right to determine who represents you and what is in your CBA. They do not.

Mr. Fishburn then arrogantly claims that your legal right to strike is merely “nothing more than a PR stunt” — suggesting that 97% of Allegiant pilots who voted to strike the carrier are mere fools and Union puppets. This “PR stunt” rhetoric is no surprise to those familiar with this carrier. Mr. Fishburn and the rest of his team learned the “PR stunt” dog whistle from the Chairman himself; textbook Allegiant. Rather than fairly rewarding your efforts for your priceless contributions to this organization, Maury Gallagher and his team hold you in contempt for unionizing.

Allegiant’s own extreme and unreasonable bargaining positions on foundational working conditions have deliberately brought these negotiations to a standstill, yet they blame the Union for delays. Since the current CBA went into effect, pilots have filed over 6,000 grievances, with an overwhelming number of those related to scheduling issues. It is clear that yet another arbitration over basic scheduling rules at Allegiant would be futile, as management’s past history – and its May 9, 2025 letter to the NMB – makes clear. A 30-day cooling off period is the fastest way to a fair contract for Allegiant pilots.

 

Hold the line!

In Unity,

Captain Joshua Allen
Negotiating Committee Chairman

Captain Jay Killen
Pilot Negotiator

Captain Brad Keller
Pilot Negotiator

Captain J.R. Lynch
NC Chief of Staff

Captain Jim Cole
Recording Analyst


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Website & App Access – Member Support Update

Website & App Access – Member Support Update

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Allegiant Pilots,

If you or a fellow pilot are having trouble logging in or resetting your account, we’ve updated our IT form to better diagnose and resolve these issues.

Steps to Take:

  • First, try resetting your password by clicking “Lost Your Password?” on the login page.
  • If that doesn’t work, fill out the Membership Access Request Form to verify your credentials.
  • Still having trouble? Submit the IT Support Form with more details so we can assist you further.

Ensure Your Union Impact Information Is Up to Date

Union Impact is more than just a platform for grievances—it is an important tool for sending timely communication and information out to the pilots. To ensure you receive important communications and essential announcements, we want to make sure your details are correct in the system.

Please log in to Union Impact and verify your contact information today.

If you know a pilot who isn’t receiving our emails or is having trouble accessing the website or Union Impact, please forward this message to them or have them reach out directly to Josh Martin, Communications Specialist for APA 2118, at jmartin@apa2118.org for support.

In unity,

Communications Committee
APA Teamsters Local 2118

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Negotiating Committee – May 8, 2025

Reorganizing for Strength!


Fellow Pilots,Management’s “Poverty” = Profitability

This week, Allegiant reported its Q1 earnings; empirical data strikes again. Management’s repeated claims during bargaining of financial “inabilities” fall on deaf ears, as the financial performance you delivered led the industry. During the call, management boasted of an industry-leading 18.1% EBITDA margin. That margin is 25% higher than Q1 2024, and the airline’s Operating Income margin is at least double that of jetBlue, Southwest, Frontier, United, or Delta. Remember, margins are scale-neutral and are used to compare the relative financial performance of carriers of different sizes. Allegiant is undeniably among the head of the pack.

Despite the accrual of your retention bonus and a new Flight Attendant contract, Cost per Available Seat Mile (CASM) actually decreased compared to Q1 2024. On the operational front, our pilots continued to deliver a controllable completion rate of 99.2% on 32,000 departures for the quarter. This is despite management’s previous false claims that cancellations are largely driven by the Bloch Award. Consider these data points from the last earnings call:

Revenue Growth: Airline operating revenue increased by 5.7% to $668M in the 1st Quarter, which is historically the worst financial quarter for U.S. airlines.

Profit Margin Growth: Airline operating income increased by nearly 150% (not a typo) to $60.9M, delivering a 9.3 % operating margin, double that of United or Delta. Operating margin increased from 3.8% in 2024, an increase of 5.3 percentage points.

Huge EBITDA Margins: Adjusted airline-only EBITDA margin was over 18%—well above any LCC/ULCC and nearly double most legacy carriers.

Cost Decrease: CASMex minus special charges decreased by 9%, including the accrual of the pilot retention bonus and the new Flight Attendant Contract.

Ancillary Gains: Even without increasing base fares, ancillary revenue increased by nearly 5% per passenger.

Utilization Increase: Utilization has increased by 20% YoY.

Scaled Reliability: 99.9% controllable completion rate with a 14% increase in capacity crushing the company’s claims that reliability and growth were impacted by the 0% unstacked, protecting, post-Bloch Award CBI solution.

This is pure profitability, not poverty. The company is not in “survival” mode despite management’s claims to the contrary. Despite this excellent performance and strong demand for leisure travel, management continues to insist that a concessionary contract with worse-than-Spirit rules and below average with extreme and unprecedented levels of forced flying is critical for their “survival”. The answer is no.

Our position is strengthened by data and the parties remain at an impasse.

Who are our Customers and Competitors?

Management insists that carriers like Spirit, Frontier, Avelo, and Sun Country are those that they “directly compete with.” Data strikes again (and not in their favor). Management has made it crystal clear to Wall Street that Allegiant is not a ULCC by classification or business model, and none of the aforementioned carriers are our “direct competitors”. Why they feel the need to lie to you is a mystery, but it is a fact that less than 5% of Allegiant’s customers come from Frontier (and only 3% of them from Spirit). Consider the following from management’s presentation to Wall Street:

Figure: Passenger Composition, Allegiant Investor Presentation

84 % of new Allegiant customers are customers of the “Big 4” — Southwest, Delta, American, or United. In fact, Allegiant has a 40 %+ Total Revenue per Available Seat Mile (TRASM) advantage over both Frontier and Spirit (even at nine pilots per aircraft). TRASM, by management’s own admission, is more aligned with brand carriers like jetBlue and Alaska than ULCCs. A fair, truly market-based contract for the pilots who deliver this industry-leading performance is revenue and margin-accretive, and non-negotiable at this juncture.

Former Allegiant COO Speaks Out About JV

We certainly don’t need management to validate our concerns regarding protecting U.S. jobs, but former Allegiant Chief Operating Officer Jude Bricker’s recent comments on Allegiant’s proposed JV deserve serious consideration. As Allegiant intensifies its efforts to outsource its flying to foreign carriers, Bricker publicly challenged management’s narrative at the latest CAPA leaders’ summit. While Allegiant claims that the JV is its only competitive pathway to international flying, Bricker pushed back, stating:

“Allegiant can fly to Mexico any time they want. There’s nothing the DOT does to prevent that.” -Jude Bricker Former Allegiant COO and CEO of Sun Country

The Viva JV in its current form is simply about outsourcing U.S. pilot jobs and flying opportunities, and not about expanding “consumer access” to international markets. When management claimed this JV would be “revolutionary” for international travel, Bricker countered:

“If [Allegiant] wants to outsource U.S. crew jobs to a Mexican carrier … I don’t see why that’s on brand to this [Presidential] administration.” -Jude Bricker, Former Allegiant COO and CEO of Sun Country

When management claimed that the JV is necessary to gain sufficient access to Mexican markets and compete with legacy carriers, Bricker noted that carriers with far fewer resources than Allegiant—including Breeze and Sun Country—already serve Mexico with U.S. based crews and no joint venture.

“You know the airport that is a Delta hub that doesn’t have Aeromexico service, Minneapolis. Why? Because we do.” -Jude Bricker, Former Allegiant COO and CEO of Sun Country

This is not Allegiant’s first attempt to outsource flying—your 757 flying to Honolulu was proposed to be outsourced to Ryanair until pilots drew a line. The time is upon us to draw the line again. Allegiant can launch Mexico service with Allegiant pilots presently, if they choose. This Union will continue to oppose any venture that does not protect U.S. jobs and guarantee Allegiant pilots their fair share of future growth and flying.

You can read the full article here.

Fort Lauderdale Transition MOU

Fort Lauderdale (FLL) is among the bases next in line for a fleet transition from A320 to B737. In an email to the FLL pilots in reference to the transition, Captain Hardesty bravely claimed that the MOU “should not be controversial, as it is already part of the Section 12 AIP that the union and company have negotiated and agreed to”. Whether this is ignorance of the bargaining process or a blatant contempt remains uncertain.

Any agreement achieved during collective bargaining over a new CBA is not available for implementation on an individual basis. As with any agreement, and especially an AIP, those terms are contingent upon the remaining outstanding terms in the contract. An AIP may become a full language TA, or it may not, but agreements on individual parts of the contract do not take effect until there is a complete, ratified contract. Management cannot cherry-pick agreements (or portions thereof) achieved during bargaining that they want to implement or “lock in” at their convenience via MOU. That’s not how it works; every pilot labor Union agrees.

Management’s statement that it is not “controversial” to attempt to use an MOU to secure terms currently under dispute in bargaining is absurd. Manufacturing a controversy to erode pilot trust in the Union and force the Union to accept terms outside of bargaining is not good faith bargaining. Further, management inferred that the FLL pilots would be harmed by their requirement to adhere to the terms of the CBA. This is false.

First, management has the means within the CBA to minimize or eliminate any hardship the affected pilots would face by opening the requisite number of vacancies (with appropriate excess) for B737 Captains and First Officers in FLL. This ensures that those pilots who wish to remain in FLL have every opportunity to do so. Management suggested that they would not/could not do so, yet since the Union held its ground and rejected the MOU, it appears that they have done exactly that. Second, those pilots who choose not to bid for the B737 in the vacancy will be afforded their displacement rights per the CBA, despite any management claim to the contrary. If the Company deviates from the CBA, the union will take all necessary action to defend the rights of the pilot group.

Our contract must be followed. TAs or AIPs achieved during bargaining do not change that. Management should be aware that no agreements achieved during bargaining are available on an individual, piece-meal basis.

If they want those terms, sign a new contract.

Misleading Capacity “Reductions”

Management will continue to sound the economic alarm to create fear and doubt in our pilot group. Regarding their statements about capacity reductions, it is worth noting that these reductions are still increases in year-over-year (YoY) figures. For example, August is still a 16% increase in ASMs and a 17% increase in block hours YoY. While management may wish to induce panic, the data shows that this is not a panic-inducing scenario in any sense. While it is reasonable to expect that Allegiant may slow some growth to match the economy, they will likely grow faster than most other U.S. airlines. Your expectations for a fair, market-based contract should remain unchanged.

General Bargaining Updates

The company has until Tuesday, May 13th, 2025, to submit their comments to the NMB in reference to our proffer of arbitration request. We will keep you informed of further developments as they occur.

In Closing

Since bargaining began, this management group has given you few reasons to trust them. They continue to erode the little remaining trust, if any, through their backhanded tactics (LAX MOU, training center rumors and leaks, etc.) on an almost hourly basis. Despite this, they will do everything possible to convince you that your Union is the problem. This management team can’t even offer the market‑based working conditions that peer carriers already provide their pilots. These provisions work with Allegiant’s “unique” business model as have been proven through testing and empirical data.

Even still, they will tell tall tales to any pilot willing to listen. “Your Negotiating Committee is the problem,” they’ll say. “They just don’t want a contract,” they’ll claim. Give that some serious thought. Your Negotiating Committee isn’t on a special pay scale or receiving some direct retirement contribution/pension/stock option scheme you don’t get. We are a committee of your peers, and there is absolutely no motivation for us to delay a fair contract – we get better work rules and raises at the same time you do. Management is a different story.

Delays save them money and wear you down. They want to stall a fair contract because it’s in their best interest. They will delay and string you along until you demand, in unison, that management deliver a fair, market-based contract to our pilots immediately, beginning with resolving the current impasse by accepting the Union’s data-based unstacking proposal. Your Negotiating Committee will continue to prepare each day to get this contract across the finish line through data analysis, strategy, and preparation, and provide you with as much information as is permissible so you can remain engaged and informed.

It is time to stand together, unified, unapologetic about what you deserve, without fear of management or the vocal minority who believe you are worth concessions. Stand behind your brothers and sisters in the fight for what you deserve. We must show respect and dignity for our profession; we can’t wait for another carrier to carry the torch for us in hopes to pattern bargain from their efforts a decade from now. Every other pilot group has fought hard for what they have. The Allegiant pilots must do the same. The unique distinction of having both industry-leading financial performance and an industry-worst pilot contract ends now.

Four years in negotiations will not result in concessions or backwards progress. An immediate, fair, market-based contract is the only option we will accept at this juncture in negotiations.

In Unity,

Captain Joshua Allen
Negotiating Committee Chairman

Captain Jay Killen
Pilot Negotiator

Captain Brad Keller
Pilot Negotiator

Captain J.R. Lynch
Chief of Staff

Captain Jim Cole
Recording Analyst



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