h25b said:
So excuse me if I could give a squat about whether a guy wants to work at GJ...
I wouldn't expect you to...its not your sandbox.
As a Fortune 500 Hawker pilot, you expect $50-60K. You've paid your dues flying Barons at night, KAs and Lears and Citations on call 135, and finally moved up to that dream job (or at least a few rungs up). You
know your worth is $50-60K, and you aren't willing to fly for less. Now lets say somebody you know flew a clapped out 501 for a cruddy owner-operator and essentialy had the same qualifications as you, but was making $38K with no benefits. If he accepted $40K plus good benefits at the same Fortune 500 job as you, doesn't that affect everybody's negotiating power when it comes time for a raise? Anybody who would do that is a fool, but we both know there are people out there that intentionally low-ball their pay to get experience or time, and it happens at every level, 91, 121 and 135.
Go Jet really isn't different than that. As a 5th year 50 seat captain, one expects their worth to be, say 65K when they make 58, but thats the CBA so thats what they get. To fly a 70 seat jet, that same captain will accept nothing less than what he or she feels their worth is, in this case 65K minimum. Somebody else (a FO making 32K who feels their upgrade is past due) is will take that 70 seat job for 59K.
Go Jet is being grown through a loophole in the TSA CBA. Yes, it is techinally legal but its not ethical, and yes I know that the world is ruthless and people look out for themselves and all that other stuff my father told me when I left for college. TSA could have scoped Go Jet flying, but turned it down recently by declining an industry-worst contract extenstion. Those planes weren't worth that contract. Some may say TSA pilots made their decision then, but I say they simply knew their worth, and weren't willing to accept anything less. The Single Carrier Petition will decide this finally and for all soon.
Will GJ ruin somebody's career? Nah, probably not. Never stopped the Freedom A people, now did it? But unless a group takes a hard stand and fights a hard fight, the regional industry will continue to become an even worse joke than it currently is. TSA is in that hard fight right now, and for the sake of my career, my school's alumni, and everybody else, I certainly hope they win.