S
sunlitpath
Or, if we were in Norway...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9HMacN2GZk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9HMacN2GZk
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What a bunch of cowards. We lost some airplanes and people are talking about pay cuts and capping seniority. No wonder this industry has gone to hell.
You people must be very proud of your paychecks.
Win. Just plain FULL of WIN.
This is the only post of the last few days that has any wisdom at all.
Thank you, sir, for a dose of reality.
Dose of reality is there is no future for ASA, and their is no paycut that will save us from this fate. We might as well get as much pay as we can while the ship sinks...
No pay cut will save us? Is this really how narrow minded the group is? The total cost goes well beyond employee compensation here. I'd be frustrated my Air Mekong class got cut too, but the sky isn't falling...
When ATL gets cut even more by MEM and DTW 200 base openings, and XJT loses 27 planes in APR, things will get pretty interesting around here
While I agree that all the regionals will be shrinking, there is no way that mainline will ever beat regional costs. It is a fantasy to believe that you're going to have much better pay and benefits at a major, and yet be cheaper than some start-up minimum-wage-paying regional.Makes me very happy that I did not participate in that video they were making in the lounge a few weeks ago for recruiting. On second thought, I'd like to do it now, but with my script, not theirs.
I honestly think we will continue to shrink. But, I also think other regionals will shrink too. Not enough pilots out there. I think there is supply for a year. Then there will be a network-redefining shortage for a couple of years. After that, the word will be out and the market will begin correcting. My deep down hope is that the regional industry disappears. Our inability to hire will force resources (pilots) into larger aircraft with less frequency. So long as mainline holds the line on scope and we continue to increase costs, it makes better business case to stop farming out the lift and operate the big, newest gen RJ's at mainline.
While I agree that all the regionals will be shrinking, there is no way that mainline will ever beat regional costs. It is a fantasy to believe that you're going to have much better pay and benefits at a major, and yet be cheaper than some start-up minimum-wage-paying regional.
For a little while I thought Delta had learned its lesson with low quality (Mesa), but it appears the race to the bottom has resumed. As long as the industry has two tiers of pilot pay, some pilots will be willing to work for nothing at the bottom tier, in hopes of making it quickly to the top tier. And you can't compete against someone who doesn't care how little he makes.
As long as the industry has two tiers of pilot pay, some pilots will be willing to work for nothing at the bottom tier, in hopes of making it quickly to the top tier. And you can't compete against someone who doesn't care how little he makes.
You have a lot to learn. I now work with pilots from all walks of life. ASA,Skywest,TSA,Pinnacle,Colgan,Mesa,US Air,Mesaba,Horizon,ATA,Aloha,Indy,Midwest,UAL furloughs among others. They, couldn't care less where I came from. Yes, I was at that horrible place (GoJet). I got my 1,000 PIC & MOVED ON to a much better place. But, hey keep up the whining, complaining and your own little jumpseat war. Let us know how that works out for you mmmmmk. For the record, G7 was a horrible place. It was no different than Trans States as far as managment, maintenance, schedules etc. I do not regret going to G7, getting my time and moving on. Good luck. With your attitude you're going to need it.
When ATL gets cut even more by MEM and DTW 200 base openings, and XJT loses 27 planes in APR, things will get pretty interesting around here
What's basically happening here is companies are being forced to operate at a loss, or no profit margin. This is not sustainable, but neither is losing your business to those that can bid cheaper. Now that it is established that GoJets can/will fly CRJ700's at a cheaper rate than ASA or Skywest, there is certainly no hope that GoJets won't win the next round of bids. This is to be expected in the era of bidding for flying. Our union cannot protect us from this. I expect Mesa to get back into the bidding and add more competition. Management at Skywest inc. MUST find a drastic way to reduce overall costs to continue to keep business. Either that, or they must continue to buy other carriers to rid the competiton. Either way, things will be very interesting as contracts expire and the flying goes to GoJets in the future.