...and have job stability...and not be forced to work until age 65 because 2 or 3 furloughs and starting over at the bottom does wonders for the retirement![]()
Oh wait, I forgot the 20 days off a month.
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...and have job stability...and not be forced to work until age 65 because 2 or 3 furloughs and starting over at the bottom does wonders for the retirement![]()
ASA Aviator-
You're not paid to fly the normal stuff...you are paid to handle the non-normal stuff. I would think with your experience you would recognize that difference. You started this career from a previous one that made a decent amount of money (based on your comments). That is quite different from those of us that went to college and then worked our way's up to where we are today. Perhaps if you looked at it from the point of view of not starting with money, you might have a different opinion.
The ROI on a $100k investment will not be very good in this industry.
I did the local FBO route and had paid off my flight training by the time I was flying checks. At the regional where I worked, I knew guys still paying $500 per month, I don't know how they did it.
This job is harsh enough economically without carrying that kind of debt around.
You're funny.
My airlines CEO recently met with the pilot group and one of the fo's was complaining to him about the low pay. The CEO responded with somthing that reminded me of your statement. He said "Where else can you make what you already make, only working 1/2 the year." He then said "If you want to earn more money, get another part time job".
You shouldn't accept substandard wages because you're lucky enough to only work 3 days per week. It's not a trade off.
You can not have a merit based system. Not possible. Define how one would work, without making us laugh, and I'll give you a dollar.
Most of the guys that aren't bitching are most likely unmarried, and/or without kids, and/or not commuting, and/or not at their 3rd airline, and/or not in debt, and/or not on reserve. I know it's great, I'm one of those guys. But to say we don't deserve to have our pay keep up with inflation over the last 30 years is asinine. What changed? Why are we the only industry of professionals that have to put up with this?
To say that our job is easy is to say that firemen have an easy job.
Nah...you didn't forget, because you know that the 20 off a month only happens with seniority there's a very good chance you'll never get to enjoy.Oh wait, I forgot the 20 days off a month.
Firemen get paid for their training after they get hired. OR at smaller departments, it is usually free paid by the state.
And I can speak from experience that while physically demanding at times, the job of a firefighter is much much easier than a pilot on a daily basis.
Oh yea, and plus you are respected by the people you serve and the supervisors above you. That's priceless.
It does suck that you have to "start over" when you go to another airline, but until the unionistas get rid of the seniority system, that ain't gonna change. If "quality" really concerned the unions, they would get rid of the seniority system.........
To those of you who responded with actual good points, thanks. The rest of you need to grow up.
If "quality" really concerned the unions, they would get rid of the seniority system, and adopt some sort of seniority/merit based system of advance.
One reason that "merit" has not been adopted as the standard for advancement is that people can't agree on who will award the rankings. Should it be Management? Sim instructors/check airmen? Crewmembers who fly with the guy frequently? Clerks who track on-time/fuel burn stats? If the answer is "all of the above", what weight will be assigned to the order of merit produced by each source? I can foresee infighting, campaigning, and even corruption in such a system.