skiandsurf said:
And what kind of training do you have to recognize a bogus license? In all of my years, I dont recall any training on this.
Thank you for making my point.
Gate agents aren't given ANY training on knowing the difference between the real thing, a fake, or just someone with a dispatcher's license or an AGI/IGI certificate - they all look the same unless you read them.
As a commercial pilot, you've obtained at least 2 or 3 of the things if not an even dozen and can recognize when some 135 newbie who really shouldn't be jumpseating is trying to hop around the system whereas a gate agent normally wouldn't. Yes, I've seen them try.
The Captain should ALWAYS be in direct control of the jumpseat. Having a gate agent tell you not to check in with the Captain is just plain wrong.
dh2wn said:
Your assumptions are wrong. It's a free ticket given by the generosity of the company who owns the aircraft. You don't deserve it by right of some higher authority.
Commuting or vacationing doesn't matter. Don't take the coveted seats and stay out of the way. Period.
You're avoiding the question of whether you commute or not.
You've also neglected to notice that many companies haven't given the jumpseat out of any "generosity", rather it's a NEGOTIATED BENEFIT that some pilot groups have in their contract because their company didn't WANT to give jumpseat agreements. In some cases, pilots have been known to give concessions in one area to guarantee jumpseat rights. Don't argue "company generosity"; your company may be the only one that really fits that mold to be completely truthful about it.
You've also carefully side-stepped the entire point you were arguing against earlier. As an off-line jumpseater who may or may not take Southwest on a regular basis, it's not fair to ASSume that everyone knows your policies and procedures.
They DO vary from airline to airline in case you haven't noticed.
The original point made a page or two back was that, if Southwest is going to have a policy for handling jumpseaters that's different than standard (especially when the seats are unassigned), then let them publish it in writing on the back of the jumpseat form and ask the jumpseater to read it. ASSuming we somehow automatically know the policy is assinine.