CitationUltra
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2006
- Posts
- 304
The argument is preposterous. It assumes that everyone will fly to 65. It assumes that pilots age 60 and up are equally distributed among airlines. It assumes that the airlines will not grow, e.g., add equipment, expand, increase flying. It's a tempting argument for you, as you are illogically opposed to eliminating the bonus you thought you were going to realize related to discriminatory mandatory retirement, but you might want to try out a correspondence course in logic to overcome your obvious limitation in that area.There are many logical argurments for age 65, and although I disagree with all of them, many are at least cognisant argurments. This is not one of them.
Anyone in the bottom 2/3 of any list will suffer from age 65 to the exact same proportion as they benefit. 5 more years on reserve, in the right seat, in lower paying equipment, more days away from family, more holidays away from family, more time on furlough, etc.
Best case is pilots at large airlines not already near the top of their lists will be forced to work that extra 5 years to end up in the same place they would have ended up at 60, including pay, retirement and QOL in the meantime. And they would have effectively paid dearly with 5 years of their retirement that t hey had to spend working to end up in the same place.
Now let's look at medical standards. Those extra 5 years are pure "bonus round" years for guys today. But for guys 15+ years from now, those 5 years will be ones they have to work to make up for what was taken from them in this bill. During those 5 years, it is much easier to medical out, so many pilots stand to lose out significantly.
Let's look at patern barganing. Every contract up for negotiations will now use revised actuarials planning on pilots at top scale for 5 more years. Earning top vacation and sick accrual for 5 more years. Higher 401(k), etc for 5 more years. Translation: keeping the status quo in your contract just got a lot more expensive. One more reason why you will be REQUIRED to work those extra 5 years to get to the same point as you would have been at 60 if the age didn't change.
Back to medical standards. They are fairly easy right now. You can still medical out, and many do, but what's tested for is pretty basic and friendly docs are easy to come by. Lots of wiggle room in the standards today. Expect that to change. Soon we will have astronaught type European physicals that far more age 60-65 guys will medical out on. Again, if an age 61 guy medicals out next year, no loss. If an age 61 guy medicals out 20 years from now, he just lost 4 years of his earnings that he needed to make to get to the same point at today's 60 year old.
I understand why you want age 65. But it has nothing to do with fairness. Its free time in the bonus round for you, at the direct expense of all junior to you. As for the making up for lost retirement arguement goes, guys working past 60 today are sacrificing their retirement years to "make up for" what was lost, so that's hardly any kind of victory for them. And the junior guys will be funding that pyramid scheme for generations to come.