Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Vote underway at Skywest

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
You should be paid more because you are responsible for more lives, more equipment, and are generating more revenue. If everything was based on how "hard" it was to fly, you'd be paid a million dollars a year to fly hard IFR in a balloon.
 
Synchoff,


There is a lot of truth in what you just said! And I somewhat agree with the senior guys...they are more experienced and have paid their dues and a payscale based on seniority addresses that very issue. I even mentioned maybe we should see a bigger increase on the top side of the longevity scale...

Would that not make more sense than a/c difference pay?
 
No Delay said:
I posted this on another thread but I thought it would fit here also. I am posting this not to fight but because I really don't understand...



I am having a hard time understanding what the big deal is in having a different pay scale for different size airplanes. I know some of you are passionate about it...and that's definately your right. I just don't get it. To me, it is the same amount of work to fly a 40 and a 50 seat...I can't see the 70 or 90 being that much more work????

Do mechanics have a different pay scale for the airplanes they work on? F/A? What about the rampers (it definately more work for them)???

I think pay should be based on experience...maybe an increase in the upper ranges in longevity scale. I think there is more value in an experienced pilot versus a pilot who can fly a 50 or a 90 seat airplane. (Any I am way at the bottom of the experience ladder, so I am not trying to give myself a raise).

Scheduling issues and QOL issues just seems like it would be so much more important to fight about. I would like to see major improvement in QOL, a slight pay raise across the board, and maybe a bigger spread (increase) in the longevity payscale.
Usually the senior guys get the bigger airplane...so essentially, they are being paid more on the bigger airplane. But in reality, they are getting paid more because they are more experienced...that just makes sense to me.







So, if Skywest had 767's, it should be the same pay as an RJ because it is the same workload? And actually I would say an RJ is higher workload, no auto-throttles, auto-land etc........
 
Jetplane,


That is definately a valid point. Where do you draw the line? I don't know. There is definately a difference between an RJ and 777. But is there that much difference in a CRJ and a CR7 or between a 767 and 777?

Of course, you don't see many companies that would have that big of a spread in equipment without anything in between. A bigger spread along the longevity pay would address this. The senior guys are generally going to get the bigger airplane (and higher pay).

If we were arguing the same scale for a 757 and a RJ...I could understand that but a 20-25 seat difference doesn't seem like that big of a deal (but that's just me).
 
No Delay said:
If we were arguing the same scale for a 757 and a RJ...I could understand that but a 20-25 seat difference doesn't seem like that big of a deal (but that's just me).

uh yeah 20-25 seats do make a difference. Do you think 20 million vs 19millon a quarter makes a difference?

NO delay you should consider HO jets
 
Dang Halo, I just agreed with you on another post...then you call me a Ho? I agree with you...the entire payscale needs to be raised! I am only arguing equipment differences.

Actually, I address this issue on another thread. Are we talking airplanes or money?

Wouldn't a REAL and FAIR profit sharing plan or performance bonuses better address sharing in the extra revenue?

Let's say I am flying the 50 seater and you are on the 70 seater. We fly the same # of hours and similar schedules. Is it fair for you to make more money just because the airplane you fly made a little extra money? What if you fly your 70 to a city that is also served by Airtran and your route is not that profitable because of competition...I on the other hand, fly my 50 seater to a city / or route that is much more profitable. Shouldn't I then (based on the your logic) get paid more because my flight generated more revenue? Then, what about passenger loads? What if your 70 has only 5 people on board? Have you generated more revenue? What if my passengers are only connecting to go to Asia? That ticket has got to be making more $$.

Again, what about the ramper? If the airplane he loads generates more rev...should he get paid more? Fueler? etc. Difference pay makes more sense for rampers, gate agents, and F/A more so than for the pilots. Don't get me wrong...pilots should make more money...I am only talking "difference pay".

It's just not a fair system. Wouldn't it make more sense that you got paid more because you are more experienced. If we are the same experience (seniority) then shouldn't we get paid the same regardless of the profitability of our plane / route? (I realize senority does not always equal experience - but it is really the only system we have). Then, as the company it makes money, we all share in it equally.

By the way...your mama is a ho :)
 
surplus1 said:
I'm in the "CMR camp" and I'm going to call you what you are: a liar. I don't believe you have "heard" anything for there is nothing to hear. Your allegation is false. The information you are putting out about the RJDC opposing any airline joining ALPA is blatantly false. I don't really care whether you like the RJDC or you don't but there is no need for you to lie about it.

The RJDC does not interfere and has never interfered in the political process, not at CMR itself and not anywhere else. The RJDC does NOT oppose anyone joining ALPA. The RJDC has never asked CMR pilots or ASA pilots to consider leaving ALPA. In fact the RJDC is against the idea of leaving ALPA.

If SKYW pilots would like to join ALPA that would be a great idea. They would be welcome.

The RJDC litigation is an effort to get ALPA to honor its Duty of Fair Representation to the CMR and ASA pilots. It has nothing to do with leaving ALPA and all of the RJDC leaders and members at Comair are also ALPA members in good standing.

There's nothing worse than running your mouth when you don't know what you're talking about or to deliberately spread false information. SKYW pilots will never see anyone from the RJDC asking them not to join ALPA. That just isn't true!

Stop spreading false propaganda! Now go back into your hole and STFU.

Once again you must not be in touch with your loyal supporters. You may want to hold a secret under ground meeting to figure out what it is those who support RJDC really want and are really out there talking about. Hell, RJDC supporters have even crapped on ALPA on this board and it was geared towards the Skywest pilots. Just like RJDC isn't a seniority grab, so says the senior RJDC leadership, but if you talk with the supporters of the lawsuit they talk about bigger airplanes and/or DOH at mainline.

But go ahead and try and hurl some more "insults" like the one above, your nothing but a malcontent has-been who put all your eggs in one basket thinking a mainline seniority number was your right and now your pissed at ALPA because they didn't grant you that right.
 
Halo_RJdriver said:
uh yeah 20-25 seats do make a difference. Do you think 20 million vs 19millon a quarter makes a difference?

NO delay you should consider HO jets


If SkyWest were to get a 70 seat rate and a 90 seat rate, how would you be paid for flying CRJ705's (CRJ900 in a 70 seat config.)? Do you want the rates for the number of seats, or size of the aircraft?

All of SKYW current CRJ7's are configured with only 66 seats. So "TECHNICALLY" no SKYW pilot flys a 70 seat aircraft. correct? ;) ;)
 
Good point, but they have 66 seats with a first class cabin whose passengers are paying more per ticket. I do not know the economics, but 66 seats with a first class may be giving more revenue than a 70 seat single class cabin.
 
Good point! So it IS about revenue, not number of pax!
 
wow

ya know, for all the skywest folks discussing/enclosing internal matters on this site you embarass the entire pilot group. Extremely unprofessional, there are internal sites designated for this.
Please use some maturity in the future.
 
The 777 is easier to fly than a Seneca, but it takes much more knowledge and judgement. The quote that keeps coming back to me is, "The more automated it is the harder it is to learn and the easier it is to fly." You certainly want to be paid for the months of study and experience it took to finally get a good understanding of the 777. I'm unsure what the best way is to set up payscales, but "ease of operation" isn't it.

ya bouy- I agree that the posts have been unprofessional when they refer to individuals and speculate about their motives, the rest are informative and I think that information about what is happening in the industry is very valuable to all of us. None of this stuff is confidential or they wouldn't have sent it out to 2000+ pilots. On the other hand, our companies recipe for the secret sauce, security issues and our plan for taking over the world are confidential and shouldn't be shared willy nilly. Don't take offense, but try pause before you mount the proverbial high horse and issue judgements. Personally I find a 24 hour rule is adequate for me to regain perspective before I condemn others.
 
FlyboyPhil said:
...On the other hand, our companies recipe for the secret sauce, security issues and our plan for taking over the world are confidential and shouldn't be shared willy nilly...
Does somebody else want to tell him? Or should I? ;) Shhhh!
 
Hello Newman. You're right. You are enlightened, able to see the industry as it truly is.Thank you, humbly, for sharing your bounteous wisdom with the rest of us. Thank you, too, for the thoroughly flawed analogies. DAL & UAL set the highest standards for pilot compensation. We at SkyWest are not asking for unreasonable rates. We'd be happy to see industry average rates on the 90-seater. Whether or not you agree with seperate rates, you can't argue that every other airline that operates similar aircraft (90-seaters) pays them more than we have been offered. We're not greedy. Regardless of what Budda says. We just want to be treated fairly.
 
Last edited:
jayme said:
You should be paid more because you are responsible for more lives, more equipment, and are generating more revenue. If everything was based on how "hard" it was to fly, you'd be paid a million dollars a year to fly hard IFR in a balloon.

I'd accept this as a valid point if there was some move to select the 'best/safest/smartest' pilots to fly the larger aircraft. This is hardly the case, however. Does $5 an hour make you any safer? Smarter? Is a 70 seater really any greater responsibility? (i.e. is the airplane more inherently dangerous?)

The only case that even begins to make your point is the 'more revenue' option. In that case, however, you jump right back into a set of arguments that favors paying more to the flight attendants/mechanics/etc. who likewise work to generate that revenue.
 
katanabob said:
I'd accept this as a valid point if there was some move to select the 'best/safest/smartest' pilots to fly the larger aircraft. This is hardly the case, however. Does $5 an hour make you any safer? Smarter? Is a 70 seater really any greater responsibility? (i.e. is the airplane more inherently dangerous?)

The only case that even begins to make your point is the 'more revenue' option. In that case, however, you jump right back into a set of arguments that favors paying more to the flight attendants/mechanics/etc. who likewise work to generate that revenue.

Your a tool- MORE PEOPLE = MORE RESPONSIBILITY= MORE MONEY! Your a fag! Your one of those fo's that flies with a hard on all the time because your flying a POS 50 seater and getting paid real money to fly it! Take your hard on somwhere else- I think our managers would lke it more!
 
Wrong Bob

katanabob said:
I'd accept this as a valid point if there was some move to select the 'best/safest/smartest' pilots to fly the larger aircraft. This is hardly the case, however. Does $5 an hour make you any safer? Smarter?
As a matter of fact, Bob, what you so glibly dismiss as 'hardly the case' is exactly what tends to happen when higher pay rates draw more senior, more experienced pilots to those aircraft. At SkyWest now, the most junior pilots in both seats are flying the 70 the most because the 70's are predominantly flown out of ORD and because there is no economic incentive for senior people to bid the aircraft. Do you deny the value of having more experienced pilots flying these aircraft?
 
Last edited:
Just checked about 5 minutes ago and Skywest stock was up $.75 in trading today alone. This brings it over $27 a share and some still feel that Skywest pilots should make less than others. Riiiiight!!!!!!

Cheers
 
Well, you know those high rates at quality operators like Mesa are an aberration. Soon, they'll have to take concessions or lose their flying...yeah, riiight.
 
Management to pilots: "The sky is falling, the sky is falling!"

Management to Wallstreet (Sept 22, 2005): "According to Kraupp, the structuring of the acquisition paves the way for continued profitability, and dramatic increases in the Company’s earnings-per-share." (Mike Kraupp is VP of finance)
 
Now, if they mislead investors they go to jail, right? Martha Stewart? Kenny-boy Lay? What happens if they mislead employees? Awkward moment or two at the company Christmas party?
 
Tool flying a mosquito

katanabob said:
I'd accept this as a valid point if there was some move to select the 'best/safest/smartest' pilots to fly the larger aircraft. This is hardly the case, however. Does $5 an hour make you any safer? Smarter? Is a 70 seater really any greater responsibility? (i.e. is the airplane more inherently dangerous?)

The only case that even begins to make your point is the 'more revenue' option. In that case, however, you jump right back into a set of arguments that favors paying more to the flight attendants/mechanics/etc. who likewise work to generate that revenue.


We need your IP address if your from UVSC. Your mosquito skills from provo are not accepted at any regional, SkyWest being no exception. Go back to instructing down there in provo. We don't need any more high altitude tight a$$es from provo. You are a complete tool and will never make it in this industry with your Ho jet attitude.
 
Is it just me, or does it seem that those who say that we shouldn't get paid based on seats probably aren't pilots? What don't you understand about larger aircraft having more responsibility? Wasn't there a study that put a human life at about $1.2mil?
The more seats = more $. More $ gets the execs rich. All the Skywest people are asking for is fair compensation. THEY are what take the payload from A to B and assume the most risk while doing it. If you think that they shouldn't get paid accodingly, then you don't fly passangers.
 
CheckandSet- What forensic arguments you bring forth. It's hard to believe you don't head a union somewhere. Oh, and only one of us flies a POS 50 seater.

Bluto- I don't discount the value of higher-time pilots, however, my argument was related to skill and responsibility. I've flown with plenty of high-time/low-skill pilots. With regard to responsibility, I just can't accept that there are crews who would react differently in a given situation based on whether they are carrying 50 people or 70. Why don't we just call it what it is? Senior people should get paid more.

Halo- I'm not familiar with this Provo flight school. Do you still have something against one of your instructors there?

OCP- If human life is $1.2mil, the difference between 50 and 70 seats truly is negligible. You really think you'd be able to pay off 50 lives but not 70?

There is a well-defined difference between RISK and LIABILITY. Experience or skill only affects the former.
 
katanabob said:
CheckandSet- What forensic arguments you bring forth. It's hard to believe you don't head a union somewhere. Oh, and only one of us flies a POS 50 seater.

Bluto- I don't discount the value of higher-time pilots, however, my argument was related to skill and responsibility. I've flown with plenty of high-time/low-skill pilots. With regard to responsibility, I just can't accept that there are crews who would react differently in a given situation based on whether they are carrying 50 people or 70. Why don't we just call it what it is? Senior people should get paid more.

Halo- I'm not familiar with this Provo flight school. Do you still have something against one of your instructors there?

OCP- If human life is $1.2mil, the difference between 50 and 70 seats truly is negligible. You really think you'd be able to pay off 50 lives but not 70?

There is a well-defined difference between RISK and LIABILITY. Experience or skill only affects the former.

And everyone wonders why we continue to spiral downwards! When you can pick up your commercial and your MBA (aviation core) at the same FBO for a two for one price this is what you get.

Gawd help us all,

AA
 

Latest resources

Back
Top Bottom