In an ideal world, adequate pay and good QOL is indeed the sensible solution to attrition problems. Unfortunately, the world is not ideal.
One might as well lament that in
an ideal world, gravity would not be the lethal obstacle it is to vertical construction, thus ladders and stairs are the only sensible solution to accessing and egression from higher floors.
But there is another way, you see, that will make the clientel of your thirty-two floor hotel content and coming back:
elevators.
A new hire who has the pay, benefits and QOL factors explained up front and accepts the position based on full disclosure of what awaits him or her, should not have issues with the notion of buying into a one year training contract.
Again: if the pay, benefits, and QOL factors explained in the spirit of full disclosure are so magnificently competetive, why the need to trap employees with financial ruin? Is it not a given that attrition will be inconsequential in light of such a deal?
We've already elegantly established that the misconception that most pilots are scumbag/wannabe/etc is psychologically mendacious (there simply aren't enough active, ATP-carrying professionals extant to the number of possible employers for the laws of averages to be remotely applicable).
Whether the training results in a type rating or not is irrelevant.
Agreed, somewhat. You win that one.
During my full-time aviation career (4 employers, 4 training contracts), I have seen quite a few enthusiastic new hires become disgruntled employees once the satisfaction of landing a job wore off. This was observed at union and non-union shops.
Perhaps the interview process wasn't as comprehensive as it should have been at these places?
In my earlier career (not in aviation), in which I was a hiring manager for some years, I saw the same phenomenon. The attractiveness of the salary and QOL offered and accepted quickly goes away, to be replaced by grumbling about how "I'm being screwed". I've done a bit of this grumbling myself. Generous raises and promotions are eagerly accepted, but the grumbling stars again fairly soon. It's human nature.
If it be merely human nature, as you're so cavalier to point out, non-bonded shops should be seeing, and should have classically seen, legions of new hires fleeing in droves. UPS, FedEx, legacy carriers, my own place of employment, etc. should have found the institutional necessity of training bonds long ago. Of course, they have not. Explaination?
The old bromide about the grass being greener on the other side of the fence holds true.
It does indeed. The existence of training-bonds at operators that employ them is testatory that it is, and that they aren't competetive. In this case, there must be (or must have
been) a myriad of superior Piaggio jobs out there (I cant think of any other way P-180 training would be useful)
No one is ever forced to accept a job.
No, not
explicitly. Seldom is one
forced to do anything within the bounds of a free society. One can be
compelled, however, with varying degrees of severity in all acts.
Having accepted the conditions of employment by accepting the job, it seems to me that one should be prepared to abide by any agreement that comes with the job.
One certainly should. One should not, however, be constrained via
dire threat of ruin. There are a host of alternatives, as I have illustrated, that mitigate attrition and offer invaluable expansions to workforce productivity, quality, and morale. Shops that employ them indict themselves for a varied assortment of practices, none of them positive.
Let's try it this way.
Employment within the free-market is a partnership. Partnerships in business always come with attendant risk. Most pertinent: the risk of competition. Contracts are purposeful for the attenuation, and in some cases,
total mitigation of said risks, I'm sure you'll accede.
A contract that is mutually beneficial to both parties is not an alien concept, and in most every case, commonplace in other forms of business. A training contract, with answerable symmetry to the benefit of the employee would be far more reasonable, i.e. if the company fails to deliver on agreed conditions, they are liable for damages; if the employee fails to deliver on agreed conditions, they in turn are liable.
This form of contract is far more palatable for agreements drafted between professionals, no?
Of course, it would be far easier to simply negate the need for contracts as any honest employer would via the methods I've previously ascribed, would it not?