My former department dumped the whole Capt and Fo thing a while back. Why should some pilot who was hired one week after the other have to play FO to that guy for the next 25 years?
Once you get to 7-8000 their is little difference between that and a 11-13000 hour guy. So why make the jr guy play fo because he got here a couple of years later?
Their just isn't enough turn over in the good departments. Having a guy spend the better part of his career as an FO just isn't fair. It's builds anomosity among pilots, creates friction and a class structure that just isn't required.
The last fortune 5 company I worked for had a minimum time for CA then that was it. You were now considered a trip manager and you ran the trip. Next week/Day/Month whenever (mostly according to the scheduler) I would be the trip manager, and so on. We were all equal. It worked out great.
Another place I flew at had hard fo's and ca's but no real seniority list (only for vacations and time off) That was alright but a guy could still wind up 10 years+ as an Fo.
I also apent at time at a department that had an airline seniority structure. Of all three this was my least favorite. Guys who had 8 or 9 years were forever pissed at the guys who got in just 6 months prior to him.
At a major they can retire anywhere from 1 to 3 guys a day so even the most jr guy can expect to see the light someday. If you were the last guy in the door at a good department you could be spending your entire career as an FO and that's not right.
Once you get to 7-8000 their is little difference between that and a 11-13000 hour guy. So why make the jr guy play fo because he got here a couple of years later?
Their just isn't enough turn over in the good departments. Having a guy spend the better part of his career as an FO just isn't fair. It's builds anomosity among pilots, creates friction and a class structure that just isn't required.
The last fortune 5 company I worked for had a minimum time for CA then that was it. You were now considered a trip manager and you ran the trip. Next week/Day/Month whenever (mostly according to the scheduler) I would be the trip manager, and so on. We were all equal. It worked out great.
Another place I flew at had hard fo's and ca's but no real seniority list (only for vacations and time off) That was alright but a guy could still wind up 10 years+ as an Fo.
I also apent at time at a department that had an airline seniority structure. Of all three this was my least favorite. Guys who had 8 or 9 years were forever pissed at the guys who got in just 6 months prior to him.
At a major they can retire anywhere from 1 to 3 guys a day so even the most jr guy can expect to see the light someday. If you were the last guy in the door at a good department you could be spending your entire career as an FO and that's not right.