007 said:
Don't you think the line has to be drawn somewhere though?
Any ideas for a solution?
In my view (such as it is!) The only way to remedy the problem is to move toward one list for all who fly under a brand. A national list would be ideal, but that will never happen. It is doubtful that we can even recover the one brand list at this point.
What is left of scope is a joke. As long as the various groups are expending all their energy vilifying (sp?) each other nothing will be accomplished. Mgmts. are picking the groups apart easily due to the fact that there is no cooperation between the pilots. Wholly owned A hates W/O B, A and B hate mainline, In some cases Mainline A hates Mainline B etc...
At present conditions, the end result will be the destruction of airline pilot as a viable career for motivated people. More mgmts. are moving toward reliance on automation for their safety nets instead of quality pilots.
This is evidenced by their continued reduction of the minimums to be hired to fly jets. They care more about how low they can drag the payscales over quality. Oddly enough, the freighters have the highest hiring standards in the industry as a whole now! Odd considering that they do not haul a single passenger.
One of two things will happen in my opinion. Either A: The career collapses to a point that no one wants to bother to spend the time and effort required to become pilots, thus forcing a wage increase to even move the airplanes. Or B: The standards are reduced to such a level that safety is entirely compromised and we see several very public and very costly accidents due to incompetence. Already we have had just a taste of such accidents and incidents, of which I do not need to mention since we all know which ones those are. So far a large number of joe public has not been hurt, but I fear it is coming in the not so distant future.
There is a way to solve the airline money loss problem, actually charge enough to cover the costs of operating! However this is killed by the preditory nature of the competeting companies. Each one figures that they can undercut the other to get the airplanes filled, and we end up with what we have now..80% plus load factors and still losing gobs of money. I flew across the country on a last minute ticket on UAL a couple of months back, $213 for LA to the east coast on a 767. If you do the math for a full airplane at those rates, they barely paid the gas for the trip, much less everything else.
It is going to take the cooperation of everyone involved, or the total failure of about half the countries airlines to level the playing field.
Of course what do I know! I just fly the things. I do know that we are only hurting ourselves by fighting each other. All the while the CEO's take home the multi million $ bonuses each quarter.