I just got done talking with a friend of mine at Mesa and what he told me was downright horrible. From what I heard pilots there are basically slaves, forced to work and be demeaned. My question is why do so many put up with it? Has Mesa always been this bad? What are the chances for a better contract? I really feel bad for those that are actually trying to get in, hopefully they know what they're getting into. Even pilots that live on base have a hard time.
Many don't. Many are leaving as fast as they can, even if it's a lateral move.
Mesa has not always been this bad. Until 2 years ago, I would have considered Mesa an acceptable career fall-back position for the long haul. They have systematically SQUEEZED, bent, or broken everything in our contract, and it's now a miserable place to work.
They did this in the face of record profits!
Even the actual flying isn't any fun . .. .I mean really, who looks forward to night after night of "flip flop flying"; sometimes day work, then showing at 1800-0700 and flying four legs with a 3 hour nap on the floor of the plane?
It's contrary to every NASA fatigue study and NTSB safety recommendation.
Yet the company will tell you with a straight face that flying a shift between 1800-0700 and 0700-2000 is exactly the same, and that sleep from 2200-0600 is exactly as restful as forcing oneself to sleep from 0900-1700.
It's dangerous, demoralizing, unhealthy, and just a matter of time before Mesa has an "incident" like Comair. But you can't sue Mesa . . .it's FAR legal, right? Oh, it's the pilots fault for not calling in fatigued. Sue the pilot (if he survives the flaming wreckage).
Contract: give it at least 3 years, and the advantage is very much in the company's favor. With all the guys leaving, the ALPA leadership is constantly changing. Our excellent MEC chairman just bailed, so we're rudderless, again.
Mesa views pilots as easily replaceable cogs in the machine. You are not valued, you are overpaid
*, and you certainly whine too much about only getting 8 days off a month. To paraphrase one of our V.P.'s . . . we only get the weekend off, why should the pilots get more?
AVOID. AVOID. AVOID. AVOID.
* Yes, overpaid. The company is currently conducting a roadshow wherein they "prove" Mesa pilots are paid far more than industry average.