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Why would a RJ Capt. leave for CAL, DAL, UAL, UAW, or NW?

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PapaSiera

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 4, 2006
Posts
118
So I was doing some looking around on airlinepilot central, and I just can't believe those FO payscales. What makes it worse is the fact that they have lower guarentees than regionals have. DAL has a 65 hr guarentee, Continental has a 72 hr guarentee, AA has a 64. Then you look at those payrates and you are making less than an RJ captain for a long long time. Since the upgrades seem to look like atleast 10 yrs (except CAL) why is it that everyone is jumping at the majors. The FO pay is AWFUL. At United, a 2nd year FO will make $42,000. a 5th yr FO will make $65,000. In contrast lets say your a 5 year Captain at ExpressJet. You will bring home $75,000 easy. I would say most people at XJT get between 85 and 90 hrs of credit a month. So I guess XJT guys make more than Legacy drivers. That makes SICK. I don't know how ya'll do it. PLEASE tell me that you atleast get more than 65 HOURS a month of credit. Otherwise I guess the LCC's are not that bad of an option. Atleast you get more than 65 hrs of pay. And you can upgrade in 2-3 yrs. Maybe I am missing something here, but how can you be in this industry for as many yrs as it takes to get to a Major, but make less than you did flying your regional jet.

My rant is over.

PS-(I DID NOT PROOF READ THIS SO THERE MAY BE SPELLING ERRORS)
 
Quality of life, payrates if you get passed the first year and what not. Granted, I make about the same as my old 6 year RJ gig, but will blow it out of the water later this year.

Was a good fit for me based on where I live.
 
Reminds me of a dog humping a leg. I'm not sure why, nor do I care, but it seems to give them alot of self satisfaction.:D

And athough I'm not an expert, from observation, it would seem that at certain legacy bases, the farther your airplane can fly, the quality of the hookers goes way up inversely proportionally to the price.:cool:

P.S. the 64 hour at my outfit is lineholder min, reserve is 73 hours.
 
So I was doing some looking around on airlinepilot central, and I just can't believe those FO payscales. What makes it worse is the fact that they have lower guarentees than regionals have. DAL has a 65 hr guarentee, Continental has a 72 hr guarentee, AA has a 64. Then you look at those payrates and you are making less than an RJ captain for a long long time. Since the upgrades seem to look like atleast 10 yrs (except CAL) why is it that everyone is jumping at the majors. The FO pay is AWFUL. At United, a 2nd year FO will make $42,000. a 5th yr FO will make $65,000. In contrast lets say your a 5 year Captain at ExpressJet. You will bring home $75,000 easy. I would say most people at XJT get between 85 and 90 hrs of credit a month. So I guess XJT guys make more than Legacy drivers. That makes SICK. I don't know how ya'll do it. PLEASE tell me that you atleast get more than 65 HOURS a month of credit. Otherwise I guess the LCC's are not that bad of an option. Atleast you get more than 65 hrs of pay. And you can upgrade in 2-3 yrs. Maybe I am missing something here, but how can you be in this industry for as many yrs as it takes to get to a Major, but make less than you did flying your regional jet.

My rant is over.

PS-(I DID NOT PROOF READ THIS SO THERE MAY BE SPELLING ERRORS)

Trust me, I am having this conversation with myself. I am at XJT, made almost 80K this year and have 3 hard weeks of vacation (which is really 6 the way our contract works). There are also over 2000 pilots at this company jr to me. If I went to CAL, it would take FOUR YEARS (on the 73) to get to my current pay and with no medical insurance for 6 months.

It is crazy when you think about it. How far have we fallen as a group!? All that being said, I started this career with a goal in mind and it was not to fly the F-ing E-145 my whole life so I will continue to look for new opportunites. I will however not leave for certain low cost cariers and other 2nd tier freight types.

Who knows??
 
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One thing long term career. If I never upgrade seat or aircraft I will still make over $10-12/hr more as an FO then I would ever make at the regional I was at. Plus I will make that top pay in 12 years versus 18 at the regional.

2-6% match on my 401k just is not gonna cut it for the length of my career I now have a 10%(soon to be 12.75%) B fund plus my 401k that is my money. The worst thing that can happen is that they stop putting money in my account.

Yeah first year sucks but so does 19/hr at a regional but you don't see guys not going there. Plus after the 6 months the medical coverage is better and cheaper then the regional I was at.

These were my reasons. To each his own.
 
Trust me, I am having this conversation with myself. I am at XJT, made almost 80K this year and have 3 hard weeks of vacation (which is really 6 the way our contract works). There are also over 2000 pilots at this company jr to me. If I went to CAL, it would take FOUR YEARS (on the 73) to get to my current pay and with no medical insurance for 6 months.

It is crazy when you think about it. How far have we fallen as a group!? All that being said, I started this career with a goal in mind and it was not to fly the F-ing E-145 my whole life so I will continue to look for new opportunites. I will however not leave for certain low cost cariers and other 2nd tier freight types.

Who knows??

To each his own but do yourself a favor, take a look at the demographics that will be voting on this next contract before you make any big decisions. I know it's a wildcard but I think it's a pretty good bet. There are a lot of young pissed off guys, something that was SORELY lacking on our last "contract."
 
19 years at Eagle, in my very early 40's.

Last 4 years averaged $122,00/year and 13 days off per month. Not a single junior man, although a few reroutes when last turn canceled. If I flew my base schedule only, I'd be around $95,000/year and average 16 days off/month. Eagle matches 87.5 % of the 8% I put in my 401(k), next year a 100% match. Started that in 1991 and now at $368,000 (got two other funds totalling almost twice that). Drive to work.

Why would I dump that for a 737 at EWR, commuting on a quarter of the pay, no better of a schedule, most likely if I did keep my pension it would be watered down, schedule worse, 401(k) worse and no job security ?

Ah what do I know.................Just another clueless RJ chump who isn't a REAL airline pilot.

But hey, that's o.k. Call me anything you want as I go to the bank with $10 grand every month (not killing myself doing it, either). At this point, it's my best bet. Almost 1 million in investments means I've funded my own retirement in 18-23 years (projected to need 2.6 million-wow !). If Eagle goes south, I'm still in failry good shape.

Keep your 737. I'll leave that slot to the 27 year old, 3000 hour RJ F/O who can make something more out of it.
 
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Eaglefly--Glad to hear a success story. Back in the old days, you could go to work for Republic (original from MN, not the cheap imitation), Frontier, Ozark, etc. and make a good living flying for an airline that was truly a "regional".

You'll have a lot better QOL than many legacy pilots who get hired on the backside of the hiring cycle.

Good luck. TC
 
We are looking at all time highs in pay at regionals and making arguments against all time lows at the majors. The industry runs in a big circle. I am sure that the major rates will go up. When that happens, if you stay at a regional, you will be one of those senior guys that is pi$$ed off he never left.
 
Simple Answer

The quick answer to your question: do what's best for you and your family. No one is FORCING you to do anything. If you are happy where you are...great. I don't think anyone is putting a gun to your head to leave the regionals.
However, most of us joined this profession for one reason or another and the basis of those reasons lie with the majors/legacies. To each his own.
 
Left TSA in '98 after 5 years. Was in training for the Jungle Jet when I quit.

Been at ATA for 8.5 years. With all the BS that's gone on here, I'm still better off. I don't regret the decision to leave.

However, I'd still like to get on with SWA or FEDEX. Maybe UPS. Those are the only carriers that I can afford to go to.
 
It's a real lifer convention in here... pathetic.
Reality is that nearly half of "mainline's" flying is being performed by sub contractors. Regionals are performing all the DC-9, Folker Jet, 737 and most of the 727 routes, as well as a lot of South America. This means there are not nearly the number of mainline jobs there used to be. Delta's list went from over 10,000 to only 6,000.

Call us lifers (maybe not me much longer) but the numbers speak for themselves. Going to a major is a no brainer good move for someone young. For those of us who got caught at a regional in our early thirties when 9/11 happened and who are now around forty - it is hard to justify a move that will require 7 to 12 years to break even on.

My crystal ball says the Regionals are in for a rough ride because they have no brand. The majors still own the brand and have much more negotiating power to improve their contracts. However, they will be stuck competing with the regionals on the small equipment.

Look at the situation with the US Air recalls who might get stuck in the right seat of the E190 for around $40 an hour. Ouch - they deserve better.
 
Eaglefly,

If I were in your shoes I wouldn't jump ship either.

In my case I would be a 6th year CRJ Capt if I had stayed at CMR. I'm starting year 2 at JetBlue and I'm back to even on pay. The only thing I've lost is a weeks vacation and with the way vacation is administered here and at CMR I'm still better off at JetBlue. JetBlue's retirement is better, I'd much rather fly my one or two leg days versus 4-5 day legs, I don't have to schlep my bag up and down the steps, no hat, better management/labor relationship, and the long term earning potential is in a different league than an RJ CA. At CMR I'd still be on reserve as a junior CA and to top it off I would also have to commute to JFK. IMO it was a no-brainer. I'm much better off at JetBlue.

Everybody's circumstances are different. What worked for me may not work for someone else.
 
I think if you're truly happy and comfy at a regional, why leave? I would say the only reason for leaving would be for the money, but even that is coming up short these days.

I don't know about UAL and CAL, but an 8th year MD80 f/o at AA is right at $100/hr, and next year it'll be $104/hr. Granted, these are 30% less than what we used to make, but a HECK of a lot more than what I would've made as an 8th year ACA pilot. And if we get close to what we want with the next contract, we should be at close to $120/hr on 8th year pay. Throw in the trip/duty rigs, our A and B fund (if it doesn't go away) and overall quality of life and you have a pretty attractive offer in most cases.

If I was still at a regional today, I'd still want to move on just to get out of that "third world pilot" mentality that I experienced on a daily basis when I was there. It sucked being looked down upon by other "real" airline pilots. Plus, I couldn't stand the overall regional mentality and depending on the major's code share affiliation.

But like everyone else said, it really depends on your situation. If you are middle aged, pretty senior and comfy at the regionals, it might not make financial sense to leave.

JMO, 73
 
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It's a real lifer convention in here... pathetic.

Yea, just what we need...a lecture from the big shot Embry-Riddle CHQ FO who has been a "real" airline pilot for what..........like a year now. Get real. You thought you were cool calling everyone a lifer back when the Seminole was a big airplane.

Join the discussion when you have more than 2k in your logbook. Run along now!
 
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We are looking at all time highs in pay at regionals and making arguments against all time lows at the majors. The industry runs in a big circle. I am sure that the major rates will go up. When that happens, if you stay at a regional, you will be one of those senior guys that is pi$$ed off he never left.

Good post and I agree. I think for most like myself leaving is the right thing. I am single, have no children and am in pretty ok financial shape. The real problem is for the 10 year guy who is making around 100K with all the trappings. Wives and children can make things complicated. All that being said, I think there are only 1 or 2 regionals that have the contract and bennies to entertain such notions.
 

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