Poahi
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2005
- Posts
- 3,766
D-Bo said:You mentioned regionals holding the bar up. What? No offense but the regional pay has been why the airline pilot pay bar has been lowered to this point. I'm a former regional pilot myself so I'm not trying to dump on you alone but every regional out there flying jet aircraft right now got their first jet on property because management came to their pilot group and said we'll get these jets and you guys can fly these jets if you fly them at these rates. And so it all began.
I'd like to offer a different point of view. IMHO, the key reason pay rates have dropped is because scope limits have backfired and the only reason regional airlines are flying the regional jets is because mainline didn't want them.
Before ALPA really got in to representing the regional airlines, the majors made sure they had what they thought was really tight scope language. After all, they didn't want to be flying small aircraft which were mainly turbo-props. They knew the pay rates and work rules for small airplanes couldn't approach the kind of terms the mainline airplanes could support. So rather than support the idea that the small aircraft should be folded in the brand, they didn't want anything to do with them. IMHO, that was a mistake.
Because of competitive pressure, management had to figure out a way to get short and thin markets covered with proper frequency, so when Canadaair and others approached them about flying RJ's, they couldn't refuse. Why should the majors fly RJ's under mainline terms when they couldn't afford to? They could cover flights with RJ's much cheaper than mainline aircraft. Rather than draw a line in the sand and exclude small aircraft, ALPA should have done its best to keep all flying in house. Had ALPA carriers done this, you wouldn't see 300 hour pilots willing to work for anything to fly a big shiny jet.
Even if the terms were somewhat different for the RJ's, we wouldn't see the disaster we see today. It's too late now. Now ALPA national is virtually powerless to help stop this kind of wage compression because it never imagined the RJ would take over a large portion of what used to be mainline flying. It is getting so bad now, that it won't be long before regionals are flying 737's and scope will be a memory. The startups and regionals flying larger aircraft will put competitive wage pressure on the majors and it will be the regionals will be the set the mainline wages. All this because scope limits have backfired. Many of the mainline pilots have already made more money than the rest of us ever will, even if we join a major. So when Capt. Woerth says he won't let XJ sign a lousy contract, I have to chuckle. That conversation should have happened 20 years ago. XJ has to fend for itself now.
IMHO, the only thing ALPA can do now is start a PR campaign targeted at student pilots and flight instructors painting them a picture of what their career earnings will be in light of the devastation in the industry and making it very clear that there is a high cost to being willing to fly for anything.