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Southwest Pilots Aggressively Push Age 65

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Try booting a SWA guy off the jumpseat and your workgroup will end up losing the most outta that.
 
Ooh, I'm scared.... Unfortunately for SWA, your actions do speak for others at SWA. Then again, you're probably an 18 year old with daddy's computer....
 
Ooh, I'm scared.... Unfortunately for SWA, your actions do speak for others at SWA. Then again, you're probably an 18 year old with daddy's computer....

Lets see who started threating who? Look back at your posts.

Actions what actions, I'm on an internet message board.

Chances are I don't jump on your airline anyway..I don't fly intra China very often. Huh where is it that you work?, if its that great why not share it with the rest of us. Maybe, I'll apply!
 
SWA/FO,

The best part of you ran down your momma's leg. Your boring me..

By the way, we make your quarterly earnings in a week or so. Don't be such a homo... And yes, we do fly to China....

Don't bother replying, you are "ignored."
 
good...cus you got your a$$ kicked.. Come back when you want some more, I'm just getting warmed up.
 
SWA is a GREAT airline and I for one appreicate their friendly people who welcome us on their jumpseats.

I think it's time to change a very outdated FAR. 60 of today is like 50 of yesterday.

I am very happy to see SWA speaking out in favor of this proposed rule change.

Good luck SWA and I hope the age 60 rule sinks like a lead canoe............
 
SWA/FO said:
I'm guarding PROFITS, Baby! Maybe I should have typed in my profile "Positive Civilian".. does that sound better? Didn't you know its furlough season, we be picking on furloughed guys, its so much fun. Where did you get this idea?

Your game is weak and so is your profile :laugh: .

Maybe you should have typed in "positive queen", cause the only thing your guarding is five star freak status on flightinfoe.com! Something tells me that your coworkers would never want to see you guarding anything too important at SWA. I don't know if you could get hired there twice, they'd probably rather let you continue to fly FO/manservant on the dainty little corporate Cessna thingy you "flew" before. Remember when your giving furloughed dude crap, he had to pass a sim check to do what he's doing.
 
I don't know if you could get hired there twice

Good thing I only had to get hired once.

Remember when your giving furloughed dude crap, he had to pass a sim check to do what he's doing.

What is it exactly your boyfriend is doing thesedays? Who does he fly for... EVA air? You don't think, I ever passed a sim ride? I had to have 1000 PIC turbine and pass a type ride to get my job, does that count? You guys work together or something?

dainty little corporate Cessna thingy you "flew" before.

You should just put Military in your profile..If you don't know your civilian aircraft. That would be Gulfstream & Falcon time. No twin cessna time for me. Now Army guys get to fly 'em...maybe some AF guys too..
 
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SWA/FO said:
You don't think, I ever passed a sim ride? I had to have 1000 PIC turbine and pass a type ride to get my job, does that count?

Nope.

Come on, how hard is it to fly those "royal barges" around? You pretty much only flew VFR, right? What, you think your equal to the guys who flew the line at a commuter or were in the military? Puh-lease! Your a fair wx aviator who worked at the whim of a fickle bizillionaire. Cool it poser, you couldn't carry furloughed dudes flight bag!

(maybe I'm being a little harsh, I mean, you did have to load the pax Tumi bags onto the G wiz, that was hard I'm sure)
 
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You pretty much only flew VFR, right? What, you think your equal to the guys who flew the line at a commuter or were in the military? Puh-lease!

Your kidding, right? I think I'm better! I'm a former freight dog. Flying formation/bombing things and flying back into/out of a hub is not what I did... no.
 
Furloughed Guy:

You stated: "...we make your quarterly earnings in a week or so." I take it you are flying for UPS...good for you and congratulations on what sounds like a fair TA. I also work for a great company and will hopefully be happy with our TA in a year or two.

A few facts to bring some sense to this discussion. First, our retirement funding is via 401K and profit-sharing. For this year (2006), SWA will contribute over $28,000 to these vehicles for me. I, of course, will also contribute $15,000 to my 401K (before taxes). That is a decent contribution on their part and will be even larger next year due to vastly increased profits and salary. I routinely move my retirement funds around to maximize returns. I have total control of every penny...it belongs solely to me.

Stock options play a role in our compensation as well. Some guys cash out immediately, but I prefer to wait until the time is right. This year, I will cash out my final options from the 1994 contract for a tidy sum of ~$50,000. I plan to hold onto my 2002 options for several more years (some don't expire until 2012). They are currently worth ~$45,000 at today's closing price. I obviously expect that number to increase as LUV increases over the coming years. BTW, I doubt stock options will be part of our next contract.

Through the end of July, my total pay is $140,000 for 85 days of work. We have a VERY lucrative vacation pay system at SWA which most of you guys don't know about.

My point is to show you that a SWA retirement is not something to laugh at. I doubt we will have any more $6 million men like a few that retired just before 9/11, but I am forecasting ~$2.2 million when I'm 60 yrs old (assuming 10%ROR) from just the 401K and profit-sharing. This number does not include additional retirement vehicles available such as Top Hat for age 55 and older. This also does not include gains from the ESPP (Employee Stock Purchase Plan) which allows us to purchase LUV at 10% below market value.

Bottom line: Don't feel bad for SWA pilots in regards to salary, retirement, or days worked. The average Captain is doing just fine on annual salary of $240K, retirement worth $2 million+, and working 12-13 days a month.

Oh yeah, I also get one of those military reserve retirements at age 60...more play money.
 
SWA/FO said:
Your kidding, right? I think I'm better! I'm a former freight dog. Flying formation/bombing things and flying back into/out of a hub is not what I did... no.

You were loading golf clubs and other bags, getting coffee and newspapers, and if you had a shred of real freight dog cred you would admit it!
 
Hey Flapgut, this isn't your fight. Frankly, your last post doesn't make much sense to me. How many rum & cokes is that? I'd love to argue all night, if it was something worth arguing for.

Get back to spooning with your furloghed dude = who has a great job.... go figure...I thought if you're furloughed you are out of work?
 
SWA/FO said:
Hey Flapgut, this isn't your fight. Frankly, your last post doesn't make much sense to me. How many rum & cokes is that? I'd love to argue all night, if it was something worth arguing for.

Get back to spooning with your furloghed dude = who has a great job.... go figure...I thought if you're furloughed you are out of work?

It's a pint of Jack Daniels and five beers if anyone is keeping score. It IS worth argueing about, you've been dipped in butter and this guy got a sh!t sandwich. Your acting like a tool and relying on a quasi credible profile to suggest you actually know how to fly. I ain't buying it. You have a great job, your lucky, that's all.
 
You have a great job, your lucky, that's all.

AAHH, the message to your posts, finally! Furloughed dude has a better job then me, though....he tells me all the time. So he is just as lucky, right?
 
The only way I would consider voting to change the Age 60 mandatory retirement is if it's delayed at least 20-25 years so all the current advocates will not benefit from an immediate change.

If you're in favor a changing the rule, which allowed this same group of pilots to upgrade due to Age 60 retirements, then fall on your sword and let the change benefit the young pilots that won't receive an instant reward for the retirement change.

Like that'll ever happen..


Junior pilots have been milking the “Age 60 Rule” for all it’s worth for much too long a time and it is high time that the Congress puts the airline industry, the FAA, ALPA and APA back on the right track. This is why the Congress must over-ride the FAA's normal rule making protocol and mediate a solution. The age 60 rule has been perpetuated by big union politics for over 40 years but the reality of the situation now must be considered and attitudes must be changed. This may be the last chance that an obvious wrong can be corrected.
Since it’s inception, “The Age 60 Rule” has been an on-going curse on the airline industry. The primary reason why the “Age 60 Rule” is still around today is because of the persistent opposition from the Airline Pilots Association (ALPA) and Allied Pilots Association (APA). ALPA and APA continue trying to prevent a change to the “Age 60 Rule” through their political influence within the FAA along with their lobbying efforts in Congress. The motive behind ALPA and APA resisting a change to the “Age 60 Rule” reflects the “me now” attitude of their junior pilots. The rule will have little chance of ever being abolished unless the younger pilot groups change their attitude. The under age 50 pilots will always represent the majority, maintaining their political power through the forced retirement of pilots over age 60. Junior pilots will always view the forced retirement of all pilots over the age of 60 as essential to their career progression. Thus the majority will always maintain command of a system that succeeds in eliminating competition from the minority. When pilots over the age of 50 finally come to the realization that the “Age 60 Rule” will adversely impact the remainder of their lives, it is too late as they are now members of the minority and have little power to effect a change.
 
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Junior pilots have been milking the “Age 60 Rule” for all it’s worth for much too long a time...
I guess you were born senior and have never benefited from the Age 60 rule during your entire career
The motive behind ALPA and APA resisting a change to the “Age 60 Rule” reflects the “me now” attitude of their junior pilots.
How is that unlike the "me then and me now, too" attitude of the senior pilots pushing for change?
 
I guess you were born senior and have never benefited from the Age 60 rule during your entire career

In my case that is exactly right! All Airline pilots need a rule that poses the least harm to all across the board, a rule that best assures their future not one that merely placates their situation early in their careers. There are just too many pilots now who at one time worked for Braniff, Pan Am, Eastern Frontier, or other carriers gone bankrupt, merged or otherwise forced to seek employment elsewhere, starting on probation wages.... again. Many pilots have four or five different uniforms in their closet, gaining seniority only in age, and need to work beyond age 60 to enjoy a decent retirement. Only the largest major airlines have the big pensions, and therefore are against any change, however, with the demise of the younger hiring age, many of their newer pilots are realizing the possibility of inadequate pensions at age 60. Most, if not all, smaller or newer carriers do not have a fixed benefit retirement. For those pilots, retiring at age 60 could be their worst nightmare. Realization of this fact may come to late for the non-forward thinking as they get nearer to the guillotine of the “Age 60 Rule”.

How is that unlike the "me then and me now, too" attitude of the senior pilots pushing for change?

Because the law is wrong, ageism and age discrimination simply must not be institutionalized by a federal law such as we now have in Section 121.383(c) of the Federal Aviation Administration Regulations, commonly referred to as the FAA’s “Age 60 Rule”.
 
Junior pilots have been milking the “Age 60 Rule” for all it’s worth for much too long a time and it is high time that the Congress puts the airline industry, the FAA, ALPA and APA back on the right track.

Incredible – talk about twisted logic. I just hope you guys fly better than you debate. Yeah, it's all the junior's guys fault.

AA767AV8TOR
 
In my case that is exactly right! All Airline pilots need a rule that poses the least harm to all across the board, a rule that best assures their future not one that merely placates their situation early in their careers. There are just too many pilots now who at one time worked for Braniff, Pan Am, Eastern Frontier, or other carriers gone bankrupt, merged or otherwise forced to seek employment elsewhere, starting on probation wages.... again. Many pilots have four or five different uniforms in their closet, gaining seniority only in age, and need to work beyond age 60 to enjoy a decent retirement. Only the largest major airlines have the big pensions, and therefore are against any change, however, with the demise of the younger hiring age, many of their newer pilots are realizing the possibility of inadequate pensions at age 60. Most, if not all, smaller or newer carriers do not have a fixed benefit retirement. For those pilots, retiring at age 60 could be their worst nightmare. Realization of this fact may come to late for the non-forward thinking as they get nearer to the guillotine of the “Age 60 Rule”.
Klako,
You can't have it both ways. You decry the fact that you started at your airline at an age older than your bretheren, and did not benefit from the Age 60 rule due to the fact that you were older than almost everyone senior to you. Why were you so old starting off... because you chose to retire from the Army with a guaranteed pension for the rest of your life.

So... when you were in new-hire training with these younger pilots (some of whom I'm going to assume left the military before putting in a full 20 years for retirement), did you offer to share part of your $1800 monthly check with them while they struggled to make ends meet their first year. Probably not. They chose to leave the military early, and lived with that decision, and knew that they weren't going to have an income supplement like you had. They knew that by leaving the military early, they would be foregoing the government pension and trading it for more years at your carrier (at least until they turned 60). You made the opposite choice. You chose to collect a "free" $1800 per month (I'm guessing but it's probably +/- $500) for how many months? You have to live with your choice.

I know, they changed the rules on you. etc.
 

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