Define "hypocrite"
The_Russian said:
Bobbysamd if you have that many hours and have trouble getting a job, and you are bitching at everyone else, then you have a problem that is far worse than the PFT'ers do.
I don't know how long you've been involved in aviation or have read aviation publications, but I gather from your profile that it has not been long. In any event, about ten years ago SkyWest was featured in
Career Pilot magazine. The article quoted a Dale Merrill, who was VP of H.R. Mr. Merrill stated than anyone who has not been hired by 2500 hours must have "a problem" and was in need of a "hard look." So, I guess I had a problem, eh? Amazing how Merrill knew all about me without ever meeting me! Never mind that I started applying there at about 1000 hours, which are SkyWest's mins.
My point, if you don't get it by now, is the people who screen apps tend to be arbitrary. The process is arbitary. It is unfair. They don't look at the whole person. However, throw a check at these people and there's no more arbitrary. Just that someone who is otherwise qualified is displaced in favor of the dough-loaded dude. FYI, I could have put my hands on money to P-F-T. I found the notion of it insulting and humiliating.
And if you are not working in the industry, then leave these people alone and let them fly the way they want to fly.
I wasn't aware that I was criticizing their flying abilities.
That aside, I came on this board about two years ago after being out of aviation eight years. What truly amazed me is that little had changed! If anything had changed, it was that fewer hours were needed to land a regional interview. In my day, 1987-'93, you needed at least 1500 total, 500 multi, your ATP and a recommendation to be competitive for most commuters. By 2001, those quals dropped to, at most, 1200 total and as little as 50 of multi, with a recommendation helpful but not necessary. Additionally, people ten years ago and now had/have the same concerns about career-building, training and - P-F-T - as they had ten years ago. Therefore, I feel I still understand the career-building and application process as well as anyone - because neither has changed.
Oh, and you seem to be a fan of Mesa's pilot program. Hmmm. Sir you ARE a hypocrite and you do not know what you are talking about. I would love to fly with you some day. I bet it would be fun. You are the kind of pilot who sets up for a 10 mile final at and uncontrolled field on a VFR day without using the CTAF. I bet twenty dollars flying with your negativity on board would put us over max t/o weight.
I'll see your twenty and raise you the cost of an entire P-F-T scholarship. The accusations aside, you, my friend, don't know what
you are talking about.
MAPD is by no means P-F-T. Once more, you must apply a two-prong test to determine if a program is P-F-T:
(1) Must you remit money to the employer for your training as a condition of employment?
(2) Is the training specific only to that company or does it lead to a certificate, rating or other qualification that can be used elsewhere?
MAPD is a flight school. The money you pay Mesa is for training for your Commercial-Instrument-Multi and for your education leading to your A.S. at San Juan College. The Commercial-Instrument-Multi certificate is an FAA certificate that is accepted anyplace such certificates are accepted. The degree comes from a fully-accredited college. Therefore, applying the generally-accepted two-prong test, MAPD is not a P-F-T outfit. The PACE program is discussed elsewhere.
Now, if you are insinuating that all you have to do is pay MAPD, get trained, and you'll have a job waiting for you, you are way off base. For one thing, as long as you do what you're supposed to do at MAPD, you'll get a Mesa interview. Although Mesa does hire a large number of MAPD grads, hiring is not guaranteed. In fact, not all MAPD grads get interviews, nor do all who go to class finish. I do know what I am talking about here, because I was an MAPD instructor ten years ago. I had a student who had antagonized everyone with his attitude. He was permitted to finish the course, but would not be given an interview.
(By the way, regarding traffic patterns, when I first started instructing at MAPD I taught my students the standard traffic pattern that you insinuated that I do not fly. I was told by my Chief Instructor that I was to teach it the Mesa way, which was not a standard 45-degree entry but flying over the center of the runway, checking the wind, and turning either left or right downwind.)
A good comparison would be
Delta Connection Academy. The main differences between it and Mesa are that it does not have a college program and that grads first must be hired as instructors and instruct for a certain period before Comair will interview them. And, many of them are not interviewed or hired.
While I never cared for Comair as a company, I never said the program is P-F-T, because it is not. Neither is Mesa.
Sorry if you think that I am a hypocrite. I would suggest that you look up the definition of "hypocrite" before rendering any characterizations. I will save you the effort of having to look up the word; here's a
link to the definition from a couple of dictionaries.