Clyde Frog
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2006
- Posts
- 315
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I don’t know how long you’ve been in the industry, but your nice guy approach will get you killed at the negotiating table.
KNOW THE RULES OF OUR GAME:
1) Management and labor are not on the same team. We have different goals and are responsible to different groups of people.
2) Management wants you to do your job for less – even now at our current rock bottom prices if you let them.
3) Management will never willingly sit down and give you a raise. They only respond to fiscal and public pressure.
4) Playing nice guy results in longer and longer contracts. The end result of this is keeping it out of your pocket and in their as long as possible.
5) Management is adept at playing labor groups against one another.
AA767AV8TOR
Here is a great idea lets go back to the ear of regulation in the 60's where those wages exisited. Only thing is about 50% pilot will have to give up there jobs. Great for those who keep them, too bad I got my for those who don't have jobs. I mean after all the passenger has nothing to do with our wages. They are a mandate from some thrid party source.
We don't get paid a market wage. We get paid where we take a stand.
Management coming after regional pilots should teach all of us that we will never make a LOW enough amount.
I find it hilarious that we apologize for $182k/year. 7 years ago- everyone was apologizing for $300k. Now look at us.
The difference between us and a pilot from the 60's is that they DID NOT APOLOGIZE. They made $500k/year in today's money- and never thought once that they didn't earn it. They respected aviation- and thought that an airline pilot deserved a certain station in life. But they also were closer to the 30's when pilots were getting reamed at the expense of the rich. They knew what they had to do. It starts with respecting yourself... Not everyone can do what we do- or would want to. We could double our wage with any decent tip jar- or by adding a dollar per hour to the price of a ticket.
It ends with what Rez said. GET INVOLVED. Your paycheck is not your birthright.
We don't get paid a market wage. We get paid where we take a stand.
Management coming after regional pilots should teach all of us that we will never make a LOW enough amount.
I find it hilarious that we apologize for $182k/year. 7 years ago- everyone was apologizing for $300k. Now look at us.
The difference between us and a pilot from the 60's is that they DID NOT APOLOGIZE. They made $500k/year in today's money- and never thought once that they didn't earn it. They respected aviation- and thought that an airline pilot deserved a certain station in life. But they also were closer to the 30's when pilots were getting reamed at the expense of the rich. They knew what they had to do. It starts with respecting yourself... Not everyone can do what we do- or would want to. We could double our wage with any decent tip jar- or by adding a dollar per hour to the price of a ticket.
It ends with what Rez said. GET INVOLVED. Your paycheck is not your birthright.
Wave? WTF. Basic economics if you raise the price of a commodity with a substitute, the demand for that commodity will decrease. Passengers buy seats as a commodity. People will travel, but some will elect to do it in their car, on the bus or even the train. Pay pilots more, fewer riders, need for fewer pilots. However the pilots who keep their jobs and seats will make more money. All airlines raise fares it is anti-trust, but the results are the same fewer jobs.
BTW how are you doing on your quest of respect?
Yip- I just don't agree that the ship swims or sinks based on pilot pay
Correct Rez that is where it should always come from. And if you have that you may find you also get respect from other sources. But if you don't it is not a big deal because you know where your respect is.My respect comes from within.....
You talk of ticket prices as if all the work that we've all done over the years has been worthless... Where does your line of thinking stop? Wouldn't it increase demand if we were paid nothing? Wouldn't that be much better for aviation? I say no b/c you wouldn't have professionals signing up for work that pays nothing. We're seeing it now-- $2000 to instruct at ATP- bonuses for regional FO's--- I think it's time for you management types to realize that maybe airline pilots were making closer to a market wage than you want to admit.