App fees
Hey, Pub, pretty spiffy home page!
Absolutely, positively, unquestionably, no. Negative. Negatory. Nyet. Airlines should not charge application fees. It's another unfair practice they use to take advantage of aspiring pilots (you-know-what is the other practice to which I refer). I ponied up a few myself in my time, when they were less money than now. My all-time favorite is my $15 Skywest app fee. I tried for six years to get an interview there. I sent tons of resumes, updates and fresh apps. I even sent them another check to ensure that I wasn't falling through the cracks for lack of payment. My check was returned, proving, to me, anyway, that I was in their system. No, I never got an interview.
Mesa is another fave. Someone on the interview board wrote how Mesa charges $50 for the initial app and $50 each time you update; updates limited to twice a year. Of course, one thing that Mesa always did well is make money. Yes, Mesa collected from me, too.
Some airlines whine that they are so innundated with pilots apps that they cannot afford to process them for free. That's baloney, in my .02 opinion. The H.R. coneheads who review apps are paid, no matter what. Other office overhead is expensed out, no matter what. It's all a cost of doing business. Instead, app fees have become another airline profit center.
Others argue that app fees screen out less-than-serious applicants. Once again, that's baloney. Some people are willing to fork up the dough to take their chances. Which leads to the next argument . . .
App fees are like playing the lottery. You make a bet and hope you win by getting an interview, and a job. You lose your bet if you're not called, or, even worse, if you are interviewed and are rejected. I recall that you are history with most airlines if you are rejected. Unfortunately, app fees are all part of the deal of applying to the airlines.
I second Finch's idea 100% that an applicant should at least receive a phone call from H.R. in return for paying the airline for the privilege of applying. Sometimes, a brief telephone conversation can be enough to convince H.R. that you are a person worthy of an interview. I also second El Cid about app fees being refunded if a person is not contacted within a time certain.