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JetBlue class dates

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This stuff is all very confusing, and everyone's situation is different today and will be different in the future. I hope no one reading or commenting on this, including me, will ever be in a situation where we have to even deal with it. I would just hate someone to leave one mediocre job with good health insurance and come here and then get blindsided by the lack of health insurance. Especially on first or second year pay. Just make the decision with your eyes wide open. I know it can be a stressful decision even without this. Good luck.

Pretty sad isn't it... Guys used to pass on continental because you didn't get any insurance for 6months...

At jetblue you get it on day one, but if your kid breaks a leg within the first two years you could go bankrupt...

bubble.jpg
 
I know a former Capt friend of mine who did exactly that. Around 2006, he passed on a class at CAL because of the 6 month insurance issue to go to JetBlue. Ran into him two weeks ago - he is pi$$ed because of the healthcare cost, the lack of movement and the union debacle. On top of that, had he gone to CAL, he could be bidding the 787 right now (junior CAL 787 pilot is a 2006 hire). Yeah, not happy. It's a roll of the dice sometimes......................



Pretty sad isn't it... Guys used to pass on continental because you didn't get any insurance for 6months...

At jetblue you get it on day one, but if your kid breaks a leg within the first two years you could go bankrupt...

bubble.jpg
 
Jetblue is a career airline for dumb d!cks with blinders who are determined to think they have something special going on with special people. Their ranks grow smaller every day and at some point they will have to quietly admit to their wives that they were wrong.

For pilots with an ounce of common sense, Jetblue is a waypoint on a very bright career path that does NOT include the idiots that promote or who run Jetblue.

And when 3A comes down like a Tsunami, Jetblue will be a angry and paranoid place to be.

Can't wait.

Not withstanding all of the above, Jetblue is a cancer eating at the airline industry that needs to be excised.
 
Jetblue is a career airline for dumb d!cks with blinders who are determined to think they have something special going on with special people. Their ranks grow smaller every day and at some point they will have to quietly admit to their wives that they were wrong.

For pilots with an ounce of common sense, Jetblue is a waypoint on a very bright career path that does NOT include the idiots that promote or who run Jetblue.

And when 3A comes down like a Tsunami, Jetblue will be a angry and paranoid place to be.

Can't wait.

Not withstanding all of the above, Jetblue is a cancer eating at the airline industry that needs to be excised.

I am a YES voter at JetBlue, but I have a question.

What makes all these other anti-pilot managed legacy airlines that have left behind thousands of shattered pilot careers so great? To listen to you, you would believe that last 70 years of aviation history never happened. Very, VERY few great airline jobs available and most of the jobs you are holding up on a pedestal are extremely flawed in other ways.

How many U.S. Airways pilots will say they have a great aviation job? How many American pilots? How many United pilots? How many Continental pilots? How many TWA? How many ATA? How many Airtran before the SW acquisition? How about Delta with their 40 times debt-to-equity vs. JetBlue?

You will say they have better benefits, to which I say vote YES. These other airlines have had severe problems that have a devastating effect on the lives of their pilots, and no YES vote could have fixed that....
 
By design, this industry is becoming one at which every airline is a stepping stone, save for a very select few.

Past career trajectory:
2-5years at a 'commuter'
30+ years at TWA/PanAm/etc

Current trajectory:
2-5 years with a crap regional
5-10 years with a stable regional (Skywest/RAH/etc)
5-10years at a LCC (Virgin, Spirit, Jetblue, Allegiant)
5-10years at a legacy (UAL/DAL)
remainder of career at 'destination' airline (FedEx, SWA)

Add in a few furloughs along the way and you better be hired at age 16 if you really want to make it to the top.
 
Smart,

That is why we need to take the step and vote for a CBA, so that we get a seat at the table when our future is at stake.
 
Pretty sad isn't it... Guys used to pass on continental because you didn't get any insurance for 6months...

At jetblue you get it on day one, but if your kid breaks a leg within the first two years you could go bankrupt...


Is it day one or is it 30 days after your first full month?
 
? If memory serves it's day one you sign on the dotted line. I can't confirm if it has changed since 08'. Call the people people you have for contact in the pool. I'm sure they'll be able to confirm any questions...
 
Per the e-mail sent to the guys staring on 11/7 today, insurance kicks in on the first day after your first 30 days. For example, if you start in August, your medical/dental/vision kicks in for October. So, for us guys starting in November, coverage would start January 1st. Kinda good. Not like I could afford insurance on the $2500 in training anyway.
 

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