Sig would have an incredibly bright future in television if he wasn't so damn ugly. I still wonder why he allows his brain to bake and lose cells in a Dash 8.:laugh:How eloquent, you are truly a credit to the profession.
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Sig would have an incredibly bright future in television if he wasn't so damn ugly. I still wonder why he allows his brain to bake and lose cells in a Dash 8.:laugh:How eloquent, you are truly a credit to the profession.
Okay, Einstein. Clearly I have to hold your hand through this, because you've made your case explicitly clear. Sadly, you've defended yourself brilliantly- using the argument that you're a moron and folks in the know should have protected you.
Who is lauging? Management. You think the fellas you suggest I slap in the janglies give a rat's arse? You pathetic moron...
Wait. Since you clearly have an entire pair of firing neurons, let me
plant a better question in your logic addled pisspot.
Here ya go! What would I be making, in 1995 dollars, of I was paid 21,000 dollars today? Better yet, reverse it. See what 21k spends like today?
I waste calories typing here. You're clearly too damned stupid to
get the fact that the map you are TOTALLY BEING AWESOME to make is cut off by your existence.
Enjoy.
The profession weeps for you. Ya moron.
And the decisions made by mainline pilots to turn their noses up at RJs had nothing to do with it, right? Go find out which pilot group was first to do that and kick them in the collective nuts for being that dumb...
How eloquent, you are truly a credit to the profession.
To answer the original purpose of this thread, the March 1, 1997 ACA pilot contract had the following rates for 50-seat RJs
Year CA/FO
1 $45.70/$27.88
3 $48.57/$29.63
5 $51.62/$31.49
10 $60.11/$34.50 (FO pay tops out in year 8)
15 $70.00/$34.50 (FO pay tops out in year 8)
In 1997, it took 10+ years of company seniority to be a CRJ CA at ACA. Most of the guys who flew it initially came to ACA from WestAir, or Air Wisconsin, as some Air Willy pilots were merged into ACA in the early 1990s. Some of these guys were originally from Mississippi Valley Airlines and most had DOHs from the mid 1980s.
The FOs typically had 3-5 years of company seniority. Most could have held J32 Captain, but the quality of life on the CRJ was much much better, what with long legs (JAX, BTV, RSW, PWM), APU, FA, etc...
CRJ FO pay was slightly below J32 Capt pay, but they more than made up for that with fat block and less workdays per month.
Additionally on April 1, 1997, all ACA pilots received a lump sum payment equalling 2.1% of their 1996 pay. On Feb 1, 1998, all ACA pilots were scheduled to receive a lump sum payment equalling 1% of their 1997 earnings. These payments were considered a "signing bonus" for the 1997 pilot contract.
Here are CRJ CA/FO pay rates effective 1 Sept, 1999
Year CA/FO
1 $48.96/$29.28
3 $52.04/$31.12
5 $55.31/$33.07
10 $64.41/$36.23 (FO pay tops out at year 8)
15 $75.00/$36.23 (FO pay tops out at year 8)
In early 2001, ACA pilots agreed on a contract that would pay 18 year CRJ CA's $100/hr.
However, very interesting to note that ACA pay rates from the mid-1990s compare FAVORABLY with 50 seat pay rates of today!
FCN
However the more people accept the reality that you are going to be at the regional level for a lot longer than you thought, the more leverage we can hopefully get.
I'll give a real answer. In 1995, I turned down an offer from Great Lakes to fly the EMB-120 for $12,000 a year. Of course, in order to get this great pay they required new hires to pay $11,500 to the Comair Aviation Academy for training costs.
First year net income: Five Hundred Dollars.
Not only will people be at the regional level for a lot longer than they thought, but they will be at the regional level FOR THE REST OF THEIR WORKING CAREERS!! Why these kids can't get that through their thick skulls is beyond me! If I had all the information available today but over 10 years ago, I would have actually made something of myself in a viable career. Do the math people. 53% of the flights in our skies at this very moment are being flown by pilots on a regional payscale. Unless you get hired by 23 at a regional, you are going to be hard pressed to make it to a major before 40 years of age. Ask any Comair, Eagle, Horizon pilot of this fact. But all these newbies think THEY will be the ones that make it to mainline and can actually get to the left seat by 50 years of age at mainline.
It is crushing to think how RJ pay has flatlined since then mid-1990s.
The only way ALPA is ever going to fix this mess is to get ALL the RJ operators (even the non-ALPA ones) in a room, throw away the key, and basically say nobody is leaving until we set a floor for RJ pay and from here we work upwards.
You forgot that it was a pay for training outfit (PFT), but then again so was Continental Express (now ExpressJet), and Comair.To answer the original purpose of this thread, the March 1, 1997 ACA pilot contract had the following rates for 50-seat RJs
Year CA/FO
1 $45.70/$27.88
3 $48.57/$29.63
5 $51.62/$31.49
10 $60.11/$34.50 (FO pay tops out in year 8)
15 $70.00/$34.50 (FO pay tops out in year 8)
In 1997, it took 10+ years of company seniority to be a CRJ CA at ACA. Most of the guys who flew it initially came to ACA from WestAir, or Air Wisconsin, as some Air Willy pilots were merged into ACA in the early 1990s. Some of these guys were originally from Mississippi Valley Airlines and most had DOHs from the mid 1980s.
The FOs typically had 3-5 years of company seniority. Most could have held J32 Captain, but the quality of life on the CRJ was much much better, what with long legs (JAX, BTV, RSW, PWM), APU, FA, etc...
CRJ FO pay was slightly below J32 Capt pay, but they more than made up for that with fat block and less workdays per month.
Additionally on April 1, 1997, all ACA pilots received a lump sum payment equalling 2.1% of their 1996 pay. On Feb 1, 1998, all ACA pilots were scheduled to receive a lump sum payment equalling 1% of their 1997 earnings. These payments were considered a "signing bonus" for the 1997 pilot contract.
Here are CRJ CA/FO pay rates effective 1 Sept, 1999
Year CA/FO
1 $48.96/$29.28
3 $52.04/$31.12
5 $55.31/$33.07
10 $64.41/$36.23 (FO pay tops out at year 8)
15 $75.00/$36.23 (FO pay tops out at year 8)
In early 2001, ACA pilots agreed on a contract that would pay 18 year CRJ CA's $100/hr.
However, very interesting to note that ACA pay rates from the mid-1990s compare FAVORABLY with 50 seat pay rates of today!
FCN