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JetBlue and the Industry

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"If we eliminate non-collegiate 141 schools where any swinging Richard can get his ATP and take your spot or FBO to Captain Schools intended originally for private pilots we are headed in the right direction."

Think about it New Plan, with comments like: "swinging Richard", how many people you have just pointed fingers at? Well, just about anyone who did not go to a collegiate school or even, though you probably did not intend to exclude them, the military pilots. Whatever your intent was, you have said that anyone who did not go the "chosen" route are not suitable.

Further you say, that you do not want to exclude those currently in the business, but from now on, "this" is the route one has to take. Well, I suppose I should be estatic that I am allowed to stay, but your rhetoric probably will not sit well with many.

Certainly many question has been asked of you, and you may perhaps be able to answer them or at least some, but, as I said earlier, unless you can make a compelling argument as to why your idea is the way to go, you will not make much headway.

P.S. The best darn pilot I ever saw, was a crop duster!
 
Sorry New Plan, but I can't agree

This thread pulled me out of the woods to stop lurking and finally register and post.

New Plan, I understand your desire to somehow correct the apparent glut of pilots vs the few piloting jobs available. Especially since this would only bring along pay increases and QOL improvements. But unfortunatly I can't see it working at all. Most of the glut of pilots is not from over production from flight schools, but from massive layoffs from tragically mismanaged companies that can't rewrite their business model to fit with the current business environment.

Any attempt to control or regulate access to an ATP rating would create the Fraternaty of all Frats. I can see parents petitioning their Congressmen to write a letter of recommendation for their children to get in. It would truely be the worst of the haves and have-nots.

And to be honest It wouldn't provide a better, safer pilot either. I've flown with guys who have come up through the School-of-Hard-Knocks and with many guys who have graduated from our military schools too. Some of the guys are lost, clueless, dangerous even, and others with the same apparent background are talented, sharp, and a credit to our profession. What this means to me is that regardless of the schooling, or background some are better than others. Thankfully the cream usually floats to the top. Only ocasionally does a real stinker make it through the system without being culled from the group.

This culling from the group currently comes from within, guys who are known to be unpleasant to fly with, or dangerous are usually pointed out as such and not hired. Unfortunatly a few still get through. My point is that most make through the schooling part and have to be culled by the industry. So I don't see any form of policing at the school level working at all.

The big problem with the industry is as we all know is too much capacity and low seat prices. The internet allows virtually instant price comparrison and those passengers with little brand loyalty will fly on anyone who's ticket price is $5 less than the others. Sad but true.

I see every flight as a sales promotion on every customer to come back and fly on us again. I make every attempt to 'warm-up' my crew and have a pep talk prior to each flight. We have to prove ourselves each time we fly. If we get to be just another airline, then we will fall into the pool of mediocrity.
 
"I'm a Doctor Jim, not a pilot"....

Phaedrus said:
Strange, no matter the topic presented, it is always twisted and contorted into a "military v. civilian" eye-poking festival.
I wonder if military guys are just that arrogant or civilian guys just have that big a chip on their shoulder. I know that's a real broad stroke of the brush. Just strikes me as odd.

....I thought we were going to make this a "pilot vs. doctor" thread?!

They have hot nurses, we have hot F/As.

They get free KY and we get none. Okay, 1 point for them.

We get all the free sodas and water (sorry UAL) and they have to contribute to the coffee fund. 1 point for us.

They deal with medical waste and bodily fluids, We walk in glycol and Jet A.....I say that's a point for us.

I've never had to check a passenger for colon cancer or asked them to turn their head and cough. Definitely a point for us.
 
"asked them to turn their head and cough."

Now don't give the TSA any ideas, they already got the gloves!
 
New Plan said:
Baylou,My wife is an MD and she will be the first to point out that medical school need not be four years long or even something beyond undergraduate. Perhaps 5 or 6 years total. If we make a program that treats getting all your ratings as a degree and then instructing and charter as some form of residency then I think we are going in the right direction...The same could be done for the military.



So why are you flying airplanes for a living??

;)

Stay at home and raise the kids...
 
I think I'll stay with my Flight Surgeon...

Dizel8 said:
"asked them to turn their head and cough."

Now don't give the TSA any ideas, they already got the gloves!

Dr. Kutchyercockoff, from the form USSR!
 
What I suggest is that we form an organization that works with the FAA to regulate who becomes an ATP in the interest of safety and saturation.


Remember that, according to FAR 61.153 c., in order to qualify for the Airline Transport Pilot certificate...the applicant must "be of good moral character."

Apparently, each one of us that holds an ATP are pretty much in line for sainthood.

Oh, except for the avarice and vitriol.

Something to think about. ::shrug::
 
New Plan,

I think the idea of regulating the industry vis a vis setting flight hour requirements, part 135 checkouts, and turbine time mins would weed out the PFTs and the barrage of flight academy 20 somethings who will yank gear in an RJ for 19.00/hr. ( sure it goes up to 25 or 30 ...big deal) Get rid of these collegiate interns and and other 500 hour wonders and the laws of supply and demand will kick in. If no one who is qualified will fly them, then they wouldn't be designed and built. I think legacy airlines foresaw the RJ as a way to cut labor costs by creating a platform for jet jockeys to yank gear and aspire to bigger things all for less than minimum wage. This is if you factor in duty time. is it actually like working for free. IF WE REDUCE THE POOL OF 121 APPLICANTS , THEN WAGES WILL GO UP.

the funny thing is the desert will be full of em shortly. too expensive to operate. passenger growth will explode making them obsolete in my stupid ass opinion.
 
Hey, New Plan...

If you really want to reduce the number of applicants, than we could always go back to the 20/20 vision uncorrected to get hired initially with the airlines, as well as the old unwritten rule of no new-hire over the age of 33.

You probably wear glasses, so I guess you are SOL.

PS: I can still read that bottom line and it's not by memory!

It is better to let market forces and personal desire/commitment work out the numbers by themself.

Staying in the cockpit these days boils down to how much BS a person is willing to put up with to keep flying. Pay, benefits, working conditions, commutability are all getting worse for the majority of the pilots.
 
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Sorry New Plan but I have to agree with Dave B on this. Your 6 para plan boils down to: "Lets form an organization to artificially restrict the supply of pilots to achieve higher wages. And by the way we will say it is in the interest of safety."

As Dave says, the low credibility light is on.
 
PENIS......PENIS, PENIS, PENIS, PENIS!!!! That is such a god am funny word, it makes me laugh......PENIS!
 
National Hire List

New Plan,

You are on the right track. Limiting our numbers would help, but I believe a total make over of the profession is in order.

Having started over three times in two years, what I think most of us want is a stable fly job with decent benefits and a retirement that isn’t subject to looting by bankruptcy courts. To do this we must separate the profession from the air carriers.

A national seniority list would never fly. No pilot with healthy carrier wants some one coming in on top of him or her. So how about this;

A national right of hire list.

Simply put, if I loss my job at carrier A, I am first on the list to be hired by an airline that is hiring. I would carry my longevity for pay purposes with me, but go to the bottom of the FO/FE list for bidding purposes. (I’d gladly be the bottom F/O at a 12 year pay rate rather than 50 YOA F/O at 1st year pay that I am now.) Insurance and retirement would be handled by a trust that is responsible to the profession and not an individual airline.

We have been conditions to think that the carrier that has hired us is superior to every other carrier that’s out there. The turmoil of the last few years has sobered that line of thought. Now we all are hoping that somebody else will go belly up so our careers may once again prosper. What a pathetic, self-centered line of thought of which I admit guilt.

Keep the brain stoming going.

GVE
 
As a person who would benefit from most of what you put forth, I say no to all. Pursuit of happiness is what we are guaranteed in the constitution. You ain't guaranteed a job. You have to earn that Bubba. Go ahead and flame me.
 
You need to pound sand! I'll take a grass strip, grass roots learned to fly person sitting next to me every day of the weeek over a "141 grad".
 
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