FlyDeltasJets
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2001
- Posts
- 664
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b757driver said:FlyDeltasJets
Quite simply, if the person passes the First Class Medical plus the recurrent PCs, let him/her be the one to decide to quit or not. Why let a 80-year-old lawmaker who votes in his own retirement package with no real knowledge of the airline business dictate when and for how much you should retire.
Actually, it is the FAA who dictates when I retire. It is my pilot group and our negotiators who decided how much I get. It is the 80 year old lawmaker who is only now sticking his nose where it doesn't belong. Thankfully, cooler heads prevailed.
And as mobs correctly points out, most countries around the world have ALREADY gone 65 or somewhere between 60-65. I though this country was supposed to be a leader!
We still have the safest aviation system in the world. I believe we are the leader. Repealing a law that has benefitted safety because others have done so first would hardly fit any definition of "leading."
Not trying to flame you here (just the topic of conversation) but I sincerely hope you are able to keep a good flying job for the rest of your career with no adversities and build a retirement worth having. Keep in mind, not everyone is in the same boat as those that have the Midas touch.
As to the age 23 for ATPs. There is a slight but very relevant difference here. That is if you are under 23, all you have to do is wait until your 23rd birthday and then carry on. Once you reach 60, you are done, you can't turn the clock back.