Rez O. Lewshun
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- Joined
- Jan 19, 2004
- Posts
- 13,422
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please splainThe race issue seemed to be the only factual information...
The race issue seemed to be the only factual information...
HR (then personell) didn`t hang around the chief pilot`s office. No one did. The chief pilot couldn`t hire or fire anyone. He/they could put in a bad word, and probably keep someone from getting hired however. In the "old days" the CP had quite a bit of pull, but by the mid 60`s they were called (behind their collective backs) "hall monitors". The decisions, then and now, come from the fabled "fourth floor". You are correct, Delta was a "Navy (and Marine) outfit". It has, in my opinion digenerated into an Air Force outfit..."Let`s have a meeting and talk about it". I think my class of 36 new hires was about 50% Marines, 30% Navy, 2 civilian pilots and the rest, Air Force. The Marines (myself included) were all "regulars' who were allowed to resign on 1 September `66. That`s why the class was full of Marines. I don`t want to start a pi$$ing contest with Air Force guys. I promise to play nice from now on. My origional senority number was 1386. My son is a Delta MD88 captain with a senority number of 6000 (out of 12,000). Hard to imagine that many Delta pilots. Use to know most of the ATL guys, I hear that there several thousand there now. Well, back to my rocking chair.We were drinking a lot of wine, perhaps, I missed some of the fine point, but I know he got hired in about week, said he was driving up to ATL, a week later he was in class. Perhaps he had done the application prior to the drive, perhaps he had taken the tests, perhaps it was the hiring director and not the CP. Would that HR guy hang out in the CP's office? I wasn't there. But I know he disappeared from the squadron on 60 days terminal leave and was working for DAL. Bob is a great guy; I don't think he would make this stuff up. BTW they may have had 15K applications, but I bet not many were Navy pilots; the Navy guys did seem to get head of the line privileges. I know a bunch of guys from my squadron (VP45) got hired over a three year period at DAL between 67-70
I cannot say. No, really, I cannot say. New policy directive from legal and HR.
I, too, noticed the way newhires were treated at the airline that cannot be named.. What a joke...
I think my class of 36 new hires was about 50% Marines, 30% Navy, 2 civilian pilots and the rest, Air Force.
The military trained less and less pilot, and the airline hired more and more pilots over the years. So s smaller percentage of military. In 1967, my year the Navy trained 3600 pilots, today they are doing around 700. I sure Air Force numbers reflect a similiar trend. Plus military pilot don't fly as much anymore. I came out of my first tour in 1971 with 2200 hours in five years. Today I see resume from guys who have spent 10 years and have less than 2,000 hours. BTW You know why DAL liked Navy pilots? They could button a double breasted uniform coat.My 1979 class had 1 Marine, 1 civilian, and the rest split about evenly between AF and Navy. By the time I retired, around half of the new-hires were civilian. My uninformed guess is that changes in the number of qualified applicants from each source had more effect than any change in management preferences. As far as I could tell, differences in "prior service" faded away after a few years with the Widget.
Still living in the past huh? Welcome to 2010. Delta has a fair number of black pilots. I don't care when the first one was hired, I only care that they have been given the opportunity to compete. That is fair. In the future, I see more black pilots - male and female - being hired. You sir are a moron. Remember the past; live in the present.
please splain