fatdumbandhappy
Kook
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2006
- Posts
- 112
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~~~^~~~ said:Why not hold out for a job that pays enough to be a pilot for a living? It is rediculous that SkyWest, or any other airline, expects pilots to give 100%, show up for work all polished up, when their pay is so rediculously low that it requires the pilot work two, or three, jobs to make ends meet.
Don't think you are getting into aviation and in a few years you will be making all this money. At ASA, we finally get some guys on the 70 seater making near $100,000 and guess what - you are being trained to replace them for around 1/5th of their pay.
Someday when you finally upgrade to Captain and begin earning what you are worth there will be a bunch of people right where you are now eager to take your job for a fraction of the pay you earned.
If you do it, be sure you get enough rest and that you are safe out there. The airline's scheduling system is rigged to where most of your time remaining after 300 hours away from base in a month is there for rest. You will learn that rest is important to your performance and fatigue is dangerous - more dangerous than drinking and flying in tests that have been performed.
"Don't ask don't tell" about drinking, or fatigue, is bad policy. How about working to improve this profession so that working two, or three, jobs is not required to equal the standard of living enjoyed by an employee of a fast food resturaunt?
SkyNation said:bear in mind that the FEW who will time out at 1000 hrs. of block are probably CREDITING upwards of 1500 hours. 1500 x 19.02 = $28530. add at least 5 or 6K in per diem to that since you'd be gone a TON, and a first year FO would make over 30K for the year. now, I've never heard of a first year FO doing that, only a few captains. if a 4th year CA did it he'd make about 95K plus per diem, he'd top 100K. that's BEFORE Performance rewards checks, which at the current average would add another 5K or so.
SkyNation said:bear in mind that the FEW who will time out at 1000 hrs. of block are probably CREDITING upwards of 1500 hours. 1500 x 19.02 = $28530. add at least 5 or 6K in per diem to that since you'd be gone a TON, and a first year FO would make over 30K for the year. now, I've never heard of a first year FO doing that, only a few captains. if a 4th year CA did it he'd make about 95K plus per diem, he'd top 100K. that's BEFORE Performance rewards checks, which at the current average would add another 5K or so.
Dubya said:So, if i'm reading this correctly, you are saying that SkyWest is paying it's 700 captains 20k per year?
I'd say you are very bitter or very stupid.
W
DoinTime said:I have never seen a first year pilot be able to pull down an average of 125 hours of credit a month at any airline. Being on reserve for awhile and flying crap lines usually prohibits such paycheck performance.
SKYWRJGUY said:Learn to use your money a little wiser and use good analogies to press for more cash. The "I'm almost on welfare" conundrum is tired...
SKYWRJGUY said:As for this "How about working to improve this profession so that working two, or three, jobs is not required to equal the standard of living enjoyed by an employee of a fast food resturaunt?". ... gimme a break; the average Captain is making more per capita than probably 80% of America--the average FO (other than first year, probably a little more as well). Learn to use your money a little wiser and use good analogies to press for more cash. The "I'm almost on welfare" conundrum is tired...
~~~^~~~ said:Average income for SLC residents is $47,977 in an area where 84% of the residents do not have a college degree. The median home price is $183,398. So I disagree with your precept that your First Officers earn more than the average and further, I believe they are very underpaid for flying a 82,750 pound jet international. As they scramble to get jobs which displace higher paid members of your profession, you encourage them.
How would you feel if the ASA pilots used ALPA to underbid you and used the power the union has to lock in scope which stripped you of your flying? Instead, we are holding the high ground on CR700 pay rates and we are encouraging you to come and join us in raising this profession. We have work to do to keep from underbidding your CR2/7/9 rates for 50 seat flying and we have steadfastly resolved to join the race for the bottom, whether it be Comair, or SkyWest, who we are being whipsawed against.
No, I'm not on welfare, no where close. But your FO's qualify - I plugged in First Year pay, with a wife and one child and qualified for:
- Basic Food Program
- Working Connections Child Care
- Medical Care
- Children's Health Insurance Program
- Medicaid
- Early Childhood Education Assistance
- WIC, and
- Telephone Assistance
ASA has no new pilots. We have senior pilots with longevity, or we used to, until you replaced them.CFIT said:So a new SkyWest pilot that makes 19/hr is doing worse than a new ASA pilot that makes 19/hr, minus 2%? ...
SkyNation said:direct your bitterness and sour grapes where they belong, SkyWest pilots didn't put you in this situation
Average income for SLC residents is $47,977 in an area where 84% of the residents do not have a college degree.
sweptback said:Of course SkyWest pilots put us in this situation. The only reason flying is being transferred is because you guys agreed to do it for less than us.
And right back at your pilot group and ALPA when you guys allowed Pay-For-Training! If you say that was a different time and place, I'll say the same about our position a few years back when UAL was in bankrupcy. Each pilot group will almost always do what it needs for it's self. Very few do what is right for the profession, us included.sweptback said:Of course SkyWest pilots put us in this situation. The only reason flying is being transferred is because you guys agreed to do it for less than us.
You guys seem to think your issues only affect your pilot group -- that is unfortunately not the case.
This has nothing to do with "you" agreeing to buy ASA. Obviously your 70-for-50 pay agreement has affected others in the industry besides SkyWest... I just don't see why you can't admit it.SkyNation said:was that before or after 'we' agreed to buy you instead of Mesa? break it down for me how that all worked out, and where you'd be now if Mesa had bought ASA, among the other scenarios? are you telling me things were just hunkey-dorey before then and all ya'll sat around grinning ear to ear about how great life at ASA was?
Our contract was industry leading in 1998 when it was signed, until shortly after when ACA one-upped us. This is how things are supposed to work.oh yeah, and please include in your explanation of how SkyWest pilots (instead of SkyWest management) has put you in your current situation (which wasn't prevented by the all-mighty ALPA) a reason why you are undercutting us and lowering the bar with your 50 seat rates?
Once again, this has little to do with DAL selling us off. Even before we were sold the mantra in contract negotiations was to stay cost competitive and "zero net gain." Our management would be rubbing the SkyWest payrates in our face regardless of whether or not we were owned by them.see how ridiculous this all is? for crying out loud, what the hell did you expect when DAL sold you off?
this was all done at the management level. it's not our pilot groups fault any more than it is yours.
Yes, PFT was a mistake. I was not here when that happened and I can't defend it. However, it was fixed a long time ago. Now ASA is one of the few airlines that not only pays full guarantee during training but gives a single occupancy room, plus there's no training agreement to sign. That is, if we ever hire again.strega7 said:And right back at your pilot group and ALPA when you guys allowed Pay-For-Training! If you say that was a different time and place, I'll say the same about our position a few years back when UAL was in bankrupcy. Each pilot group will almost always do what it needs for it's self. Very few do what is right for the profession, us included.