GogglesPisano
Pawn, in game of life
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2003
- Posts
- 3,939
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Let's not forget what they are doing to their regional contractors. They already put 500 Comair guys on the street and are about to put 2500 Pinnacle pilots on the street. Yep, everything is coming together...
Let's not forget what they are doing to their regional contractors. They already put 500 Comair guys on the street and are about to put 2500 Pinnacle pilots on the street. Yep, everything is coming together...
How on earth is DAL reassigning the flying to the cheapest outsourced bidder good for the career as a whole? Do you really think they are taking the flying back? All I see is them reducing the overall hourly cost of a CR9 from $150/H for the entire crew, down to $120/H. How can that be good for the profession?Sad for those guys but mainline taking back flying is a good thing for the future if all professional pilots.
How on earth is DAL reassigning the flying to the cheapest outsourced bidder good for the career as a whole? Do you really think they are taking the flying back? All I see is them reducing the overall hourly cost of a CR9 from $150/H for the entire crew, down to $120/H. How can that be good for the profession?
Let's not forget what they are doing to their regional contractors. They already put 500 Comair guys on the street and are about to put 2500 Pinnacle pilots on the street. Yep, everything is coming together...
Sad for those guys but mainline taking back flying is a good thing for the future if all professional pilots.
And not good for all the other professionals that worked/work at those airlines. But as usual pilots only care about pilots.
This latest contract shifted a large amount of formerly-regional flying back to mainline.
And not good for all the other professionals that worked/work at those airlines. But as usual pilots only care about pilots.
That needs to be drilled into every aspiring Commercial pilot out there. Unfortunately, most of them don't care, which is why the "taking it back" approach by ALPA was doomed from the beginning.The biggest threat to a regional pilot isn't a mainline pilot, its another regional pilot willing to work for less.
True, but the shifting of flying from one higher-cost Regional to another lower-cost Regional at the expense of those people trying to get to that Major airline job, while labeling it "the cost of doing business", is despicable. Those are people with families with no way to replace the incomes, and right before the holidays, too.While gut-wrentching to experience, the shrinking of the regional business and expansion of mainline flying should be something most aspiring airline pilots welcome as ultimately the best way to eventually secure a mainline airline job.
Dumb Pilot is precisely correct.
While SOME flying is shifting back to Mainline, by dumping Comair and, if it goes down like that, PCL as well, while shifting the new CRJ-9 deliveries to the lowest bidder, they are artificially LOWERING the bar for the Regionals that people worked VERY hard to raise, while simultaneously hurting a LOT of careers.
That's never a good thing.
Dumb Pilot is precisely correct.
While SOME flying is shifting back to Mainline, by dumping Comair and, if it goes down like that, PCL as well, while shifting the new CRJ-9 deliveries to the lowest bidder, they are artificially LOWERING the bar for the Regionals that people worked VERY hard to raise, while simultaneously hurting a LOT of careers.
That's never a good thing.
I only look at it differently because I didn't take the job as a new-hire F/O, but rather as an off-the-street CA with Pay and Hotel and Per Diem while in training. Wouldn't have taken it otherwise.Where was your outrage when you took a job flying the RJ and lowering the bar while mainline was furloughing around the holidays. It was a awesome Christmas present for the family then too. you gladly flew that RJ. you were part of the problem? Or was that different.
I only look at it differently because I didn't take the job as a new-hire F/O, but rather as an off-the-street CA with Pay and Hotel and Per Diem while in training. Wouldn't have taken it otherwise.
I also didn't get hired during the holidays, have no clue about the furloughs you're talking about. When I got hired, every Major was hiring, my company was shutting down and putting me out of a job, and while I had interviews lined up at UAL and was working with PR to get a DAL interview, I had to have something to hold me over.
Then 9/11 happened.
Not sure what you're getting at but if you're talking about working at the Regionals as an overall problem, then yes, I guess I'm guilty. Just wouldn't do it for the slave labor wages they pay new-hires.
Just a minute there buddy! The pilot group at PCL fought very hard to get those pilots jobs at PCL, it wasn't the pilots working at the regionals that voted outsourcing by margins of over 60%, it was mainline pilots. There were over 200 NWA guys worked at PCL until they started recalling or simply moved to other gigs (some went to FDX/UPS) besides the point that PCL also furloughed in 01, although for a short period because guess what? The mainline pilot group voted to increase the outsourcing and that is when PCL started getting 2 to 3 airplanes a month, I was a line trainer then and for a good couple of years I did nothing but train NWA guys.I was talking about the furloughed mainline pilots that happened around the holidays in 01. Yes you were part of the problem working at the regionals.
When was that!!?? I don't know how long you've been in the industry, but the bellwether contracts occurred during times of full-throttle expansion by airline clamoring for market share. That hasn't happened in 30 years or so.The days of pilots of the industry standing together to raise the bar is gone.
Everybody has their opinion about it, and you're certainly entitled to yours.Ok buddy. I am just tired of all this anger against mainline pilots for trying to take back flying from contract carriers. I don't remember anyone having sympathy for mainline furloughed pilots that had no vote on outsourcing flying. I could have went to PNcL. I did not want to help lower the bar as you did. Never worked for one never will.
The problem is deliberately shutting down one company because their costs are too high then simply farming the portions of THAT flying that they like to a newer, lower-cost airline. The outsourced flying IS STILL THERE, they're just screwing over people to make it cost mainline less to farm it out.
THAT'S what I'm upset about. Hope that makes sense.
That kind of mentality is a large indicator of what is wrong with Corporate America and why the middle class will continue to get squeezed until there's nothing left of this Country but MBA's and bean counters at the top and entitlement people at the bottom.The MBA's and bean counters wouldn't be doing their jobs if they weren't exploiting this to squeeze every last dime for the shareholders. Not personal, it's their job, and they're doing it right.
What did you have in mind?When ALPA and the collective pilot mentality moves to the 21st century, maybe things will improve... but until then... it's just sad to watch.
Dumb Pilot is precisely correct.
While SOME flying is shifting back to Mainline, by dumping Comair and, if it goes down like that, PCL as well, while shifting the new CRJ-9 deliveries to the lowest bidder, they are artificially LOWERING the bar for the Regionals that people worked VERY hard to raise, while simultaneously hurting a LOT of careers.
That's never a good thing.