poorFITgrad'02
Bottom o' the List
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2002
- Posts
- 25
I only intend this to vent some things about the CFI lifestyle, because I'm poor and I found out today my car is on its last legs and I have basically no money right now to get another one and to put anymore money in the trashbox I have would be pointless. Severe Structural Rusting, ha, whats the worst that could happen? My car breaks in half.
Where do I begin? The Certified Flight Instructor is the most important person in aviation, second to the mechanic. Without either of these people, planes don't fly and people don't know how to fly them.
How much do instructors in other fields get paid per hour? Why can't instructor positions be salaried? Because if we aren't teaching the flight school doesn't make money? Okay, apply this to every other job out there in the world. How about the fire fighter, what if you paid them only when they were fighting fires? You'd have no fire fighters in the world cause you are rarely on a call and they would be poorer than CFI's.
To those instructors who only get paid when the Hobbs meter is running, I'm right there with you. I too have had the frustration of getting to work at 8am and leaving at 5pm like every other American who works with back to back flights all day, no time for lunch, only to total up the numbers at the end of the day and discover you logged 5 hours and thus thats what you got payed.....on a good day. How about on a summer day, 8am to 11pm, maybe you do hit that 8 hours of dual given.....only to find you have been at work for 15 hours. Working 7 days a week is what it takes to try and get that impossible 40 hours a week on that paycheck.
What's the solution? Charge for every minute of pre and post? Then rates go up and your out of competition with other flight schools. I'm a big fan of block pay. 2 hour block, 2 hours of pay. But of course, then the part 61 flight school I'm at would go under.....so I'm told. The 141 school I was at used to pay per block hour until recently. Seemed fair to me.
Is it no wonder that a few people I know who are on the way to getting thier Commercial are totally avoiding the instructing path? The responsiblity and the pay just DON'T ADD UP. My signature is in the logbook of many students who I have trained from the begining, but some whom I have inherited. How do I know that other CFI has trained them well? Sure, I can do evaluation flights, quiz them endlessly on the ground, but then students will leave every time they get an instructor change for whatever reason, because now they have to pay for how many hours to prove to another instructor what they know and during this time, progress is slowed.
This industry is going to find one day that quality instructors are going to seem to dissappear. Why subject yourself to years of living in poverty when you can run to Alaska with 200 hours and get a 135 job or go to Florida and become another PFT statistic?
Right now, I know there are a lot of people with CFI certificates collecting dust, sending out countless resumes trying to get a flight job. Trust me, I am more than thankful to have a flight job at this point with the way the industry is. It's just frustrating getting that pay stub every other week and realizing that you might not be able to make your rent payment, let alone any other bills. Who wants a job that pays like that? I know there are people out there who would live out of their cars just to get paid for getting flight time right now.....those will be the quality instructors out there. The ones who are willing to make that sacrafice, but how many will that be? From what I see, less and less people everyday.
The CFI position is just about the bottom of the professional pilot totem pole in terms of pay. So one could argue that just like any career, the starting job is usually crap for pay and lifestyle. Yeah? Someone mention to me a career where the spectrum starts at a CFI pay and tops out at $300,000+ a year for a big-iron-international captain. Most starting careers out there begin in the high 20's middle 30's. That's affordable living.....not 12,000 a year.
To those that might say I'm bi*ching, maybe I am. But things in this world don't change unless someone does so. So the next time you go to your small, local flight school to get checked out or a Flight Review, or for your next lesson, just remember the CFI. Do something you love for a living and is it really work? But unfortunately, this world wants money for everything. People work for money.
My 2 cents.
Where do I begin? The Certified Flight Instructor is the most important person in aviation, second to the mechanic. Without either of these people, planes don't fly and people don't know how to fly them.
How much do instructors in other fields get paid per hour? Why can't instructor positions be salaried? Because if we aren't teaching the flight school doesn't make money? Okay, apply this to every other job out there in the world. How about the fire fighter, what if you paid them only when they were fighting fires? You'd have no fire fighters in the world cause you are rarely on a call and they would be poorer than CFI's.
To those instructors who only get paid when the Hobbs meter is running, I'm right there with you. I too have had the frustration of getting to work at 8am and leaving at 5pm like every other American who works with back to back flights all day, no time for lunch, only to total up the numbers at the end of the day and discover you logged 5 hours and thus thats what you got payed.....on a good day. How about on a summer day, 8am to 11pm, maybe you do hit that 8 hours of dual given.....only to find you have been at work for 15 hours. Working 7 days a week is what it takes to try and get that impossible 40 hours a week on that paycheck.
What's the solution? Charge for every minute of pre and post? Then rates go up and your out of competition with other flight schools. I'm a big fan of block pay. 2 hour block, 2 hours of pay. But of course, then the part 61 flight school I'm at would go under.....so I'm told. The 141 school I was at used to pay per block hour until recently. Seemed fair to me.
Is it no wonder that a few people I know who are on the way to getting thier Commercial are totally avoiding the instructing path? The responsiblity and the pay just DON'T ADD UP. My signature is in the logbook of many students who I have trained from the begining, but some whom I have inherited. How do I know that other CFI has trained them well? Sure, I can do evaluation flights, quiz them endlessly on the ground, but then students will leave every time they get an instructor change for whatever reason, because now they have to pay for how many hours to prove to another instructor what they know and during this time, progress is slowed.
This industry is going to find one day that quality instructors are going to seem to dissappear. Why subject yourself to years of living in poverty when you can run to Alaska with 200 hours and get a 135 job or go to Florida and become another PFT statistic?
Right now, I know there are a lot of people with CFI certificates collecting dust, sending out countless resumes trying to get a flight job. Trust me, I am more than thankful to have a flight job at this point with the way the industry is. It's just frustrating getting that pay stub every other week and realizing that you might not be able to make your rent payment, let alone any other bills. Who wants a job that pays like that? I know there are people out there who would live out of their cars just to get paid for getting flight time right now.....those will be the quality instructors out there. The ones who are willing to make that sacrafice, but how many will that be? From what I see, less and less people everyday.
The CFI position is just about the bottom of the professional pilot totem pole in terms of pay. So one could argue that just like any career, the starting job is usually crap for pay and lifestyle. Yeah? Someone mention to me a career where the spectrum starts at a CFI pay and tops out at $300,000+ a year for a big-iron-international captain. Most starting careers out there begin in the high 20's middle 30's. That's affordable living.....not 12,000 a year.
To those that might say I'm bi*ching, maybe I am. But things in this world don't change unless someone does so. So the next time you go to your small, local flight school to get checked out or a Flight Review, or for your next lesson, just remember the CFI. Do something you love for a living and is it really work? But unfortunately, this world wants money for everything. People work for money.
My 2 cents.