Regional job expectations
SCT said:
Why do these guys and gals think the "industry" owes them a job with a com/ multi/ instru. and 500 hrs?
The answer is simple: the advertising and propaganda.
Take a look at flight school ads in pilot magazines. There was one that advertised, "From Zero Time to Regional Airline Pilot in Nine Months!" How can that do anything but hook someone? Then, you have the flight school "career consultants," who are nothing more than salesmen. They toss any sense of truth or ethics aside to sign up someone, and will say anything they want to hear. By the time the student finishes, he/she is expecting a regional job at 400 hours because it has been pounded in him/her.
Moreover, let us not forget the Pied Piper of the Pilot Shortage, Kit Darby. He has been predicting a pilot shortage since 1987 and has been saying since that time that 40-thousand new pilots would be needed during the next ten years. Combine Kit and flight school advertising, and the result is a lethal witch's brew of sophistries and broken "promises."
I'll be the first to admit that I was hired in the hiring wave in the mid 90's. But I at least had 2,000 hrs and a lots of real world entry level exp.
It was the same during the late '80s hiring wave, which, coincidentally, was the beginning of the Kit Darby pilot shortage. Pilots who had the times but were heretofore ignored suddenly were sought after. And newbies could get on with the regionals with 1500 total-500 multi, or less, sometimes.
We had two gals at Riddle who fell into that category. They were hired at ERAU in 1988 with their single engine ratings, and were probably hired because the Chief Instructor at their school became ERAU's Chief Flight Instructor. The school got them their multis and MEIs, and, a year later, in 1989, were hired by Express I. I know that neither had their ATPs and one had only 280 hours of multi. As far as I know, her only professional flying experience was her 800 hours of instruction given at Riddle. Now, before someone says these two ladies were hired because they were women, we had a guy at ERAU who learned to fly at American Flyers in Florida and who was hired at Riddle with about 700 hours. Not long after he got into the multis, Comair hired him. I don't think he had 1500 total-500 multi and/or his ATP.