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The Skinny on the Age 60 Rule

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pilotyip said:
Ivauir, yes it is about money, not necessarily greed. There many pilots whose careers have not provided for a retirement at age 60 they are done, they are not eligible for SS until 62, they need to be able to work their full career until SS retirement age. For union carriers, make 60, or 55 or whatever your contracted retirement age, but let the rest of us work until we can retire.

Yes, Who could possibly not agree with that?
 
Klako said:
Yes, Who could possibly not agree with that?

Me, and many others. I've laid my stance and reasoning out very plainly and I don't care to repeat myself. Under SR65 there are clear winners and losers. You have a much better chance of changing the law if a clear majority of pilots supported the change. In order to win that support any change would have to be more equitable than the windfall situation created by SR65.
 
I see the age 60 rule not only as pure age discrimination but it is also in a sense socialism, taking from those who have earned their seniority and giving it to those who do have not. What one earns does not belong to others. Pilots should expect to gain seniority not at the expense of others but as a result of their hard work, fortunes and success gained within the company they work for, i.e. expansion and natural attrition. We earn our profession and our seniority; it is in a sense our property. The state must not deprive anyone of life, liberty, or property, without due process. The FAA’s age 60 rule deprives qualified pilots of just that.
 
Still Opposed? Grasp this!

Flopgut said:
They are not being told they cannot work. If you can't muster the initiative to find yourself something to provide for your upcoming needs then why should the rest of us have to put our careers on hold to help you out? ...... Should we garnish your last five years of earnings to make sure you save? Maybe those of us with a better grasp on reality should adopt you when you turn 60?

The airlines don't hire pilots because someone retires. Pilot hiring occurs when the airlines have growth. Period. Dot. Period.

What part of mandatory retirement don't you understand? Initiative got each of to where we are today. If your career is on hold, it's on hold only because of your personal choices.

None of us "In Favor" are asking for your charity. Only the chance to work at the job we love (and already have), while we are still capable. I say again, "If your career is on hold, it's not because I have a job".

If you can't see that what's mine is not yours, just give up our present job, and try to replace it, dollar for dollar! Let me know how that turns out for ya.
 
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ivauir said:
We all know this is about money. The senior have more to gain that the junior. Even the playing field and you may get some support.

in the end I will not supprt your windfall! You want a change in the age? Address the effects on junior ppl. Ignore those effects, and lose our support.

Money isn't the most important aspect of this debate. Every one of us has to hang it up on our birthday +XX. WHY? If you like letting others control your life, keep on ignoring the facts.

The fact is, a "windfall" for me, is a windfall for you and everyone else. If you choose to retire five years before I do, I'm happy for you. I may choose to retire at 60 too, even with the option to work. Hell, I'd like to retire at 50! For now, I don't have the choice, and neither do you.
 
3BCat said:
Money isn't the most important aspect of this debate. Every one of us has to hang it up on our birthday +XX. WHY? If you like letting others control your life, keep on ignoring the facts.

The fact is, a "windfall" for me, is a windfall for you and everyone else. If you choose to retire five years before I do, I'm happy for you. I may choose to retire at 60 too, even with the option to work. Hell, I'd like to retire at 50! For now, I don't have the choice, and neither do you.

i see your point...but if money is not the issue..what is ? the love of flying..it seems this issue was brought up again because of the lost pensions.. MONEY!!! my issue is that if i retire early, i get penalized...now i will get penalized even more...is that fair? what about my B-fund..what happens to that? so i am having trouble figuring out how money is not the issue...and as far as others controlling our lives...we are pilots..most of of fly where we are told or are scheduled...so we are controlled constantly..thanks
 
3BCat said:
Money isn't the most important aspect of this debate. Fine, then lets make the law that you can work past 60 as an FO. Every one of us has to hang it up on our birthday +XX. WHY? If you like letting others control your life, keep on ignoring the facts. You are the one ignoring the FACT that SR65 is unfair and rewards those at the top of the senority pile at everone else's expense.

The fact is, a "windfall" for me, is a windfall for you and everyone else. Really? How does it benefit the guy who retired last week? The guy on the street? The brand new FO? If you choose to retire five years before I do, I'm happy for you. No chance of that happening, I'm going to have to stick around to make up for the extra years I was shut out of the left seat. I may choose to retire at 60 too, even with the option to work. Hell, I'd like to retire at 50! For now, I don't have the choice, and neither do you. That is right, if SR65 passes I'll be working untill I a 67 if I live that long)[/quote]


Gimme a break! How can you say that the change will effect everyone else the same (and why does Klako think that only the senior have "earned their senority)? You have not a shred of credebility unless you:
- support right of return for those already retired
- acknoledge that the senior have benefited from the forced retirements of those before them
- acknoledge that the junior will suffer senority stagnation (that the senior did not experience)

So far all I hear is platitudes and whinning about age discrimination, but it helped your career, and now that you are on top (because someone turned 60) I am supposed to "earn" my senority... why should I? You didn't.
 
Whose whining?

Look at USAirways. No hiring for almost a decade in the 90's. Plenty of guys retired in those years. Why didn't they hire pilots? NO GROWTH.

I'll acknowledge that pilots advance in relative seniority due to retirements, and junior pilots will always languish when the seniority list stops growing. But, if you hang your future on retirements so you can "move up", you will be disappointed to find that you end up closer to where you started than where you wanted to end up.

I won't speak for anyone else. I have worked for seven airlines. I have never been at the top of any pay scale, nor do I expect to be. I have what I have because I worked hard for it. I'm not pointing my finger at anyone else for my position, and I never will.

Lots of airlines are hiring again. They are getting airplanes, expanding route maps, and GROWING. What have you done to get ready to take advantage of this opportunity? I hope you're ready, and I wish you luck.

This growth is not just your opportunity, its mine. Even though I already have the job I've been looking for, growth improves my relative seniority, and therefore, my quality of life. Retirements just don't cut it. Forced retirement cuts it even less.

I say get the job, enjoy the lifestyle, and most importantly, walk away when you want to, not when you are told to take a walk.
 
Klako said:
I see the age 60 rule not only as pure age discrimination but it is also in a sense socialism, taking from those who have earned their seniority and giving it to those who do have not. What one earns does not belong to others. Pilots should expect to gain seniority not at the expense of others but as a result of their hard work, fortunes and success gained within the company they work for, i.e. expansion and natural attrition. We earn our profession and our seniority; it is in a sense our property. The state must not deprive anyone of life, liberty, or property, without due process. The FAA’s age 60 rule deprives qualified pilots of just that.

I am for changing the rule to no age limit. That being said, your argument does not hold much water. No one really "earns" seniority. Simply staying at a company, while some may view as loyalty, does not in my book, equate "earning". If seniority was governed by some measurable standard then you may have an argument. But since it is simply a time sink, the old crusty guy witth 25 years at the company is no more important than a new hire under the current system of seniority. We all do the same job and we all do it equally well. Of course egos and such will take over and someone will state that "I am the better pilot" and such but when it comes down to it, we all do the exact same thing. None of us sell tickets, clean the airplane, fuel it, fix it, etc. Of course our actions as pilots have an effect on customer loyality but for the most part a pax will follow the money and convenience.

I understand why some, if not most, do not want the rule to change. It means we stay junior longer and that means less money for us. Those that are at the "affected" age (55 plus or so) get a double benefit, but that is not their fault, maybe a bit low on the morality side if none of them were vocal about changing the age 60 rule when they started out, but morality has a tough time fitting into law making.

The age 60 rule is flat out age discrimination, not one single medical or perfomance study can prove otherwise. The only thing I ask is some understanding and compassion from those that are going to benefit from this change. There are going to be disgruntled FOs and even Capts because of the perceived loss of THEIR "earned" upward movement in seniority. Just keep in mind you guys benefited from age 60 retirements, and if you really want to make it fair, every pilot who has been forced to retire before you, should be allowed, if they want, to come back and hold their old seniority number and equipement.
 

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