SlumTodd_Millionaire
Most Hated Member
I'm sure they would argue that the training they received in their transition course is "experience." Not sure that I would agree, but I'm also not willing to say that they didn't earn their jobs.
I think my main beef is with programs that offer people a chance at an interview they would not otherwise be qualified for in exchange for money. The minimums at Pinnacle were 1000 total and 200 multi......unless you went through one of those programs. Then, you were suddently better qualified and were awarded an interview slot ahead of someone that actually met the advertised minimums. It's pretty much a moot point now since Jet U is out of business and Pinnacle won't be hiring for about the next decade. However, I stand by my opinion that it's a slap in the face to those that worked hard to meet those minimums only to be jumped in line by someone with a co-signer.
ATN, to me, it's a lot like the age 65 thing. People play by the rules, then someone changes the rules.
This is always one of the most idiotic conversations. Everyone thinks their way to get where they are was the best way, and anything less was "buying a job" or "taking a shortcut." I don't really think too highly of Cherokee_Cruiser nowadays, but it can't be said that he "bought a job." He just did something to give himself a leg up in his career. In most professions, that would be considered smart. Only on Jetcareers is it considered something unethical.
Oh please, ATN, people have a difference of opinion, it's not the end of the world.
Oh please, ATN, people have a difference of opinion, it's not the end of the world.
In fact, it's a sign of entering... The real world.
My undeniable truths, at least in my eyes, are torn apart and debated daily and it's my darned site. As a user, to expect everyone to subscribe to your views is as crazy as it would be for everyone to subscribe to mine.
It's awfully convenient how personal attacks that you agree with are just "differences of opinion," but personal attacks that you disagree with are "violations of the TOS."
Debating the merits or lack thereof of programs like JetU is a difference of opinion. Attacking someone as being a job stealer or something of the like is not a difference of opinion, it's a personal attack.
There are were many paths to get to where you want to go. I went to a flight school that offered private, instrument, commercial, multi, and a RJ bridge program. If you already came in with the Comm/Inst/ME ratings, you could just do the RJ program. 9E had bridge agreements with several flight schools, and 9E *advertised* these flight schools on their own career webpage. Back then, it was www.nwairlink.com/careers and all their bridge program approved schools were there. I didn't buy a job. I went through a school that was 9E-approved, followed the 9E syllabus, and then 9E came down and interviewed every month. If you buy something, you are guaranteed it, because you paid for it. In this program, all you really paid for was some ground school, system classes, CPTs, and sim time. That's what your money buys you. The interviews are still per-chance. Maybe you will get lucky, maybe not. It was and still is a risk. As I stated, 6 out of 10 got hired, which means 40% would like to disagree with you that they bought their job. In the class before us, 5 out of 10 were hired, again 50% would disagree about buying a job. All your money buys is some RJ ground school and sim time. All the rest is a crapshoot, having to go through the same interview as everyone else.Would you have gotten the INTERVIEW much less th job if you had not attended the "RJ program that was 9E specific?" No. Therefore, you bought the interview, and thus the job. I and the rest of us that busted our asses instructing and other aviation jobs to get where we we could meet the minimums just to get an interview at the same place were and are pretty damn insulted there are people willing to toss up the cash for a short cut. No matter how ya cut it, it's a short cut. But, whatever you need to tell yourself, I guess. As for the people that didn't make it, well, I remember there were a bunch of us on the board warning of this. There was already a long list of places like ATA or TAB Express that had more or less done the same thing and separated fools from their money.
Improve your resume or meet the hours to upgrade? Let's remember where your thoughts were back then, and it wasn't about going to Vigin America or any other carrier. In fact, let's just look at your next sentence:
You flew your butt off to make $$$ and build on the handful of hours you were hired with in order to upgrade.
Incorrect. We did have it, it was required. I just wrote that the initial ATP written I took was more than 2 years old since it was taken back in 2007 for 9E. To get my ATP outside 9E in 2011, I had to re-take the ATP written because it is expired. The only way the 2007 ATP written stays valid is if you upgrade at 9E.Wait. Jet U guys didn't even need to have the ATP WRITTEN done?!?! There's another thing people needed that didn't buy the interview. The rest of us needed the ATP written done before we could even interview at 9E.
I'll agree it took money and it was essentially a shortcut. But I did not buy a job. The interview still had to be passed, like any other street hire (like you), and therefore, the job still has to be earned.Your current one, maybe. But you're dreaming if you don't think anything but extra $$$ and a short cut got you the job at 9E.
In this program, all you really paid for was some ground school, system classes, CPTs, and sim time. That's what your money buys you. The interviews are still per-chance. Maybe you will get lucky, maybe not. It was and still is a risk. As I stated, 6 out of 10 got hired, which means 40% would like to disagree with you that they bought their job. In the class before us, 5 out of 10 were hired, again 50% would disagree about buying a job. All your money buys is some RJ ground school and sim time. All the rest is a crapshoot, having to go through the same interview as everyone else.
I'll agree it took money and it was essentially a shortcut. But I did not buy a job. The interview still had to be passed, like any other street hire (like you), and therefore, the job still has to be earned.
Such utter nonsense. You guys focus on something that means absolutely nothing in the grand scheme of things, but ignore things that really are the problems in our profession. Hell, one of the people leading the criticism here works for a non-union airline! There's a real problem dragging down our profession, not some kid paying a few thousand bucks for an RJ course. While you worry about PFT, PFJ, and RJ transition courses, the real problems affecting us are non-union competitors, state-sponsored foreign airlines, lack of job portability, regional RFP wars, and a whole host of other real problems. But those don't get much attention, because talking about them doesn't bring you the same sense of self-importance as yelling at some kid for going to JetU and bragging about how you "earned" your job.
Pilots truly are their own worst enemies, Rocketman, but not for the reason that you choose to harp on.
There are were many paths to get to where you want to go. I went to a flight school that offered private, instrument, commercial, multi, and a RJ bridge program. If you already came in with the Comm/Inst/ME ratings, you could just do the RJ program. 9E had bridge agreements with several flight schools, and 9E *advertised* these flight schools on their own career webpage. Back then, it was www.nwairlink.com/careers and all their bridge program approved schools were there. I didn't buy a job. I went through a school that was 9E-approved, followed the 9E syllabus, and then 9E came down and interviewed every month. If you buy something, you are guaranteed it, because you paid for it. In this program, all you really paid for was some ground school, system classes, CPTs, and sim time. That's what your money buys you. The interviews are still per-chance. Maybe you will get lucky, maybe not. It was and still is a risk. As I stated, 6 out of 10 got hired, which means 40% would like to disagree with you that they bought their job. In the class before us, 5 out of 10 were hired, again 50% would disagree about buying a job. All your money buys is some RJ ground school and sim time. All the rest is a crapshoot, having to go through the same interview as everyone else.
Incorrect. We did have it, it was required. I just wrote that the initial ATP written I took was more than 2 years old since it was taken back in 2007 for 9E. To get my ATP outside 9E in 2011, I had to re-take the ATP written because it is expired. The only way the 2007 ATP written stays valid is if you upgrade at 9E.
You had the option to do it, even back in 2006. You chose not to, and that's fair enough, to each his own. But the point is, that path was available for you, and you chose not to go down it. That's not really like Age 65 where different rules apply to pilots. Pinnacle advertised two different hiring tracks, a street hire with 1,000 and 200 ME or a bridge program pilot with lower total hours. All were free to choose either path.