Common use of Vacation Period Slide Clause in Contracts

Vacation Period Slide. a. A pilot may enter a vacation slide submission during the Conflict Input Window immediately before the bid period in which a trip(s) affected by the slide (or the vacation period itself, if no trip is affected) is scheduled to begin, as provided in Section 25.E.2. (Conflict Input Window). A pilot may adjust his vacation period by sliding it up to a maximum of 5 days in either direction. However, the slide shall not reschedule any portion of that vacation into the preceding bid periods of November or December. A vacation period of more than 7 days, that begins in one bid period and ends in the following bid period, may be slid up to a maximum of 5 days in either direction. Example: A vacation in the first week of January may not be slid back into December, but a vacation in the first week of February may be slid back into January. The slide must be accomplished during the Conflict Input Window for the January bid period (which is in late December). b. A pilot may slide a vacation to conflict with a carryover trip as provided in Section 7.E.2.a. (above), only if he submits for the slide during the Conflict Input Window associated with the award of bid period in which the carryover trip began [e.g., the Conflict Input Window in the end of November (i.e., the Conflict Input Window for the December bid period award) is used to slide a January vacation to conflict with a December into January carryover trip]. c. If a pilot slides his vacation period to within 48 hours of the scheduled end of a trip in which the last activity is an international duty period, that trip shall be deemed in conflict with the vacation period, except for a trip described in Section 12.D.1.c.i. d. There is no maximum limit on the number of credit hours that may be touched by a vacation slide.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Employment Agreement, Employment Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Vacation Period Slide. a. A pilot may enter a vacation slide submission during the Conflict Input Window immediately before the bid period in which a trip(s) affected by the slide (or the vacation period itself, if no trip is affected) is scheduled to begin, as provided in Section 25.E.2. (Conflict Input Window). A pilot may adjust his vacation period by sliding it up to a maximum of 5 days in either direction. However, the slide shall not reschedule any portion of that vacation into the preceding bid periods of November or December. A vacation period of more than 7 days, that begins in one bid period and ends in the following bid period, may be slid up to a maximum of 5 days in either direction. Example: A vacation in the first week of January may not be slid back into December, but a vacation in the first week of February may be slid back into January. The slide must be accomplished during the Conflict Input Window for the January bid period period, (which is in late December). b. A pilot may slide a vacation to conflict with a carryover trip as provided in Section 7.E.2.a. (above), only if he submits for the slide during the Conflict Input Window associated with the award of bid period in which the carryover trip began [e.g., the Conflict Input Window in the end of November (i.e., the Conflict Input Window for the December bid period award) is used to slide a January vacation to conflict with a December into January carryover trip]. c. If a pilot slides his vacation period to within 48 hours of the scheduled end of a trip in which the last activity is an international duty period, that trip shall be deemed in conflict with the vacation period, except for a trip described in Section 12.D.1.c.i. d. There is no maximum limit on the number of credit hours that may be touched by a vacation slide.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Tentative Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Vacation Period Slide. a. A pilot may enter a vacation slide submission during the Conflict Input Window immediately before the bid period in which a trip(s) affected by the slide (or the vacation period itself, if no trip is affected) is scheduled to begin, as provided in Section 25.E.2. (Conflict Input Window). A pilot may adjust his the pilot’s vacation period by sliding it up to a maximum of 5 days in either direction. However, the slide shall not reschedule any portion of that vacation into the preceding bid periods of November or December. A vacation period of more than 7 days, that begins in one bid period and ends in the following bid period, may be slid up to a maximum of 5 days in either direction. Example: A vacation in the first week of January may not be slid back into December, but a vacation in the first week of February may be slid back into January. The slide must be accomplished during the Conflict Input Window for the January bid period (which is in late December). b. A pilot may slide a vacation to conflict with a carryover trip as provided in Section 7.E.2.a. (above)., only if he the pilot submits for the slide during the Conflict Input Window associated with the award of bid period in which the carryover trip began [(e.g., the Conflict Input Window in the end of November (i.e., the Conflict Input Window for the December bid period award) is used to slide a January vacation to conflict with a December into January carryover trip]). c. If a pilot slides his the pilot’s vacation period to within 48 hours of the scheduled end of a trip in which the last activity is an international duty period, that trip shall be deemed in conflict with the vacation period, except for a trip described in Section 12.D.1.c.i. d. There is no maximum limit on the number of credit hours that may be touched by a vacation slide.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Tentative Agreement

Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!