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NTSB also looking at pilot compensation!

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GSXR600

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 31, 2007
Posts
432
Just saw a report on CNN that besides training (does not apply to all) and pilot fatigue also pilot compensation is a problem for regional airlines.

May be this will be positive news for a better pay in the near future.......or may be not, since the goverment is getting involved!
 
The best time to be an airline pilot was when the government was heavily involved.


I'll second that. There are a lot of things the government should not be involved in. But anything that involves public safety and transportation, I think they need to be very involved. Deregulation is the worst thing to happen to the airline industry. Sure for a short while it was great for the traveling public, but now it as resulted in horrible customer service and unsustainable businesses. Add to that it is overseen by a regulatory agency that has the dual function of promoting and policing the industry and way too often it has caved in to management at the expense of safety.
 
They can never regulate how much a pilot gets compensated. The only thing that they can regulate is how much total time is required to pilot a transport catagory aircraft. And this, in my opinion, is what needs to change.

If they re-write the regs to require both the PIC and SIC to have an ATP (which is certainly within reason), then compensation would go up because there would be fewer qualified pilots. This is what needs to be done. It will keep the 250 hour wonder pilots in the instructor seat of a 152 where they belong.

I know I will get a lot of flak from the guys who got hired with low time, but can you honestly say that requiring an ATP to get hired at any airline is too much to ask for?
 
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They can never regulate how much a pilot gets compensated. The only thing that they can regulate is how much total time is required to pilot a transport catagory aircraft. And this, in my opinion, is what needs to change.

If they re-write the regs to require all pilots to have an ATP (which is certainly within reason), then compensation would go up because there would be fewer qualified pilots. This is what needs to be done. It will keep the 250 hour wonder pilots in the instructor seat of a 152 where they belong.

I know I will get a lot of flak from the guys who got hired with low time, but can you honestly say that requiring an ATP to get hired at any airline is too much to ask for?

I agree. We should raise the minimums for an ATP certificate while we are at it. Doubling it might be appropriate. It would return us to the "pay your dues" and instruct, fly checks, etc.. and learn. It would weed the garbage, create a pilot "shortage", increase pay & benefits & working conditions. I'm all for it. I knew nothing at 300 hours. Sorry guys...feel free to tee off.
 
The best time to be an airline pilot was when the government was heavily involved.

The NTSB has no enforcement abilities. All this attention to low pay and fatigue may be great now but when the final report comes out the cause of the accident will be simply that the pilot failed to respond correctly to a stall. It's going to blame training not the other reasons as to way he didn't apply proper stall recovery technique. Fatique may be listed as to the reason they didn't catch the decreasing airspeed though but the bottom line is it was the stall and improper recovery that caused the crash. No mention of commuting or low pilot pay as a contributing cause. Case closed!! And all will be forgotten except the only change will be the FAA will impliment stricter stall training for everyone.
 
You are correct that the NTSB has no enforcement ability. But public pressure can be very powerful. We as airline pilots have been crying for years that the public doesn't understand what it really is like for pilots. Well we now have our opportunity. We need to stop acting like we always do and need to get together and push for some major change. Contact ABC news, they are trying to get some information about working for a regional airline (I'll post the like at the bottom). Write your elected leaders in Washington. Write letters to the editors of your local papers. Talk to friends and family. We have an open window right now and it is our duty as professionals to take advantage of it and do what we need to work for a safer industry. If we let the window close, who knows if it when it will open again. Keep the pressure on and keep this in the news.

Pay will not come back right away, but there can be changes made, that should be made, that can have a positive effect on safety, quality of life and pay.

ABC news:
http://abcnews.go.com/Travel/story?id=7585208
 
I like the idea of requiring all pilots flying 121 posses an ATP. Seems reasonable. Heck you need far more experience to run canceled checks in a Cessna than you need to fly a jet full of passengers.

Remember too that most of us get our ATPs when we upgrade. This would most likely require pilots to pay a flight school to get the ATP certificate before applying. Although I could see airlines start to just require ATP minimums for applying and then awarding the ATP certificate at the new-hire check ride. Still, it would begin to limit the supply of low timers ready to jump into an RJ with 500 hours.

Everyone write their Congressmen and Senators and begin a push for this ASAP. Let's get moving people.
 

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