Heard they're also discussing a DL/SWA merger. You'll be wearing those classy hats, Navy uniforms, and asking for windchecks in no time!
At the bottom of the list! What goes around, comes around!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Heard they're also discussing a DL/SWA merger. You'll be wearing those classy hats, Navy uniforms, and asking for windchecks in no time!
Heard they're also discussing a DL/SWA merger. You'll be wearing those classy hats, Navy uniforms, and asking for windchecks in no time!
That's exactly right... What a mess the government made of this once-great career. :/
You can't be serious....you're blaming the government for destroying what you consider a once great career.....wow.
I guess he's saying deregulation is the same as the government. Somehow, that seemsbackward to me. Its the REMOVAL of government that screwed things up.
So Majors only flying wide body int'l? Qantas did the exact same thing, outsourced the narrow body, but now the Emirates' of the world are destroying Qantas. So damn...a canary in the coal mine for Major's?
So what do you do? What about UPS and FedEx? They have a lot of retirements too, but in 20 years you'll see pilotless cargo planes."
quote from "http://forums.flightinfo.com/showthread.php?t=145444"
No. I'm saying deregulation destroyed the career expectations of just about every employee group in the airline industry to allow for the general public to fly as fares naturally decreased with increasing competition.
The unexpected byproduct is that to compete, an airline will price a route at a loss to protect market share, to the point they are unprofitable, file bankrupty, void contracts, and start all over again.
I guarantee you that this scenario wasn't planned when deregulation was passed.
Ill add that the reason for such high payrates in the 60s was due to the pilot pay formula established in arbitration back in the 40s. As aircraft productivity went up, so did the pilots pay rate. When larger faster jets were introduced, naturally the pay sky rocketed.Successful for the economy? Debatable, once the costs of multiple trips into bankruptcy court has been included.
Successful for the average consumer through severely depressed ticket prices? Certainly. The average ticket price is down nearly 60% compared to pre-deregulation prices, adjusted for inflation.
The average traveler may rejoice. I shall not, until incomes are restored back to 1960's -era income levels, adjusted for inflation.
YMMV
That explains the history, but doesn't address the reality that pilot pay has not kept pace with inflation, and I fully expect it to.
I love to fly, but I could have been an attorney or doctor and still done that on the side. I expected to be properly-compensated for it when I made the decision to become a professional pilot, according to what the pay scales were even in the 80's, and I still expect that.
If people can't understand pay raises never being LESS than inflation-adjusted wages of what they made in years past adjust for the value of the dollar, then maybe they deserve what they get. I don't need to strangle the golden goose, but getting back to where pilots were before their companies' 1113(c) filings and continuing to adjust yearly for inflation should not be thought of as an unreasonable goal.