I am a very keen supporter of aviation and have a profound interest and love for the industry but I have a concern that just blows my mind. Flying planes in my opinion is supposed to be a HIGH class job (white collar professional) for which in many cases, a degree and very intense training and abilities are required. Why does the compensation and respect given not reflect in accordance with the training and financial investment made? Here is my concern. You can get a job that requires little to no education in an industry that is considered LOW class (blue collar) but you are treated with more respect and paid much more. Given the responsibility and everything else that goes along with flying a high dollar airplane full of people or freight, you should think it ought to be worth more than what we (trained and educated)get.
It almost comes down to doing what you love for almost nothing, or you have to trade what you love for something you don’t like so that you can make a living. How do you bridge this gap? Is it possible to change the mentality in the industry and if so, how do we as aviators do that?
It almost comes down to doing what you love for almost nothing, or you have to trade what you love for something you don’t like so that you can make a living. How do you bridge this gap? Is it possible to change the mentality in the industry and if so, how do we as aviators do that?