floridabeachbum
Well-Known Member
I do not know. But the mere fact that the FAA has formed a committee to address this has the op informed us I would say soon. Can't say when.If what you say is true; how long will it take to go into effect?
I do not know. But the mere fact that the FAA has formed a committee to address this has the op informed us I would say soon. Can't say when.If what you say is true; how long will it take to go into effect?
That's extremely irritating. The FAA....I don't know what to say about this.I do not know. But the mere fact that the FAA has formed a committee to address this has the op informed us I would say soon. Can't say when.
I agree but something tells me mainline doesn't want to pick up the slack. They wish to leave the status quo alone. And has a previous poster mentioned if the regionals do try to pay a fair wage on their own they will get Comair'd. Look at what Delta pays endeavor there wholly owned subsidiary. If you go to work there you get a crap wage for the chance to get on at mainline Delta. In my opinion mainline doesn't want the flying back. They want it done as cheaply as possible.Drop the Sim requirement. Leave the rest alone. A lot of people aren't looking forward with this realizing that if the regionals can't hire, mainline has to pick up the slack. Short term loss, long term gain.
I agree but something tells me mainline doesn't want to pick up the slack. They wish to leave the status quo alone. And has a previous poster mentioned if the regionals do try to pay a fair wage on their own they will get Comair'd. Look at what Delta pays endeavor there wholly owned subsidiary. If you go to work there you get a crap wage for the chance to get on at mainline Delta. In my opinion mainline doesn't want the flying back. They want it done as cheaply as possible.
Then why did Delta buy all those 717's and "Conited" not renew a contract out of IAD for "streamlining?"
And the Endeavor "flow" is the biggest smack in the face to the regional industry since I've been flying. The guys that are there got screwed, and the guys there for the flow will probably never see it. You'd be better off going to Mesa and taking your chances getting hired from "outside."
You make too much sense!!! Begone!! And take your reasonableness with you!! How dare you make valid educated points presented in a logical argument in this discussion based on emotions!! What are you some type of thinker???My personal feelings aside on what is and what is not qualified has no bearing on the issue at hand. The truth is that the rule under it's current state is unsustainable so it is unrealistic to expect it to remain as is. Nor is it worth getting emotional about the fact that it will be altered. So in the end, it will and probably should be changed. Do I think someone should be piloting 50 or more people around with 250? Of course not. Do I think it is necessary for someone to have 1500 hours before they are hired? Certainly doesn't hurt but isn't a requirement and doesn't define the level of pilot.
The important part is the quality of the individual, the quality of the training, the quality of experience, and the standards required to attain the necessary ratings. 500 hrs, 1500 hrs, 2000 hrs, or 3000 hrs mean nothing in regards to airline safety if the training sucked and the experience is entirely unrelated (no IFR experience for example). I don't have the answer on how to best accomplish that but I've said for a long time that we need higher and tougher standards, more barriers to entry, and better "apprentice" type of oversight.
Then why did Delta buy all those 717's and "Conited" not renew a contract out of IAD for "streamlining?"
All they need to do is raise the pay and QOL a notch and people who have the quals but couldn't afford the job will come fourth. Pilot pay is a small fraction of the overall costs to run an airline. If the FAA bows to the RAA on this what's next? Sad state of affairs....
All they need to do is raise the pay and QOL a notch and people who have the quals but couldn't afford the job will come fourth. Pilot pay is a small fraction of the overall costs to run an airline. If the FAA bows to the RAA on this what's next? Sad state of affairs....
I agree with that assessment Cav. But it appears are going to try to lower the minimums first. Once they see that will not give them a 500 hour pilot overnight then I suspect first year pay will go up.The only way to "get rid of first year pay" is for the economics to force the issue. That appears to be happening.
The only way to "get rid of first year pay" is for the economics to force the issue. That appears to be happening.
Okay everybody take a deep breath, because what I am about to say will seem hard to believe but it is true. Yesterday I spoke to the FAA because I heard a rumor they were granting ATP written extensions. So while that proved to be untrue we got on the subject of the pilot shortage cities losing service and the airlines cutting capacity. I was told rather ambiguously that the 1500 hour rule is going to drop. The FAA is closely monitoring the pilot shortage and seeing how it is affecting the nations airline service - especially at the regional level. They are starting to have some concerns with the flight cancellations and capacity cuts looks like Brian Bedford and the gang are getting ready to have their way. The RAA has even started a website. I will try to post a link later. Just the messenger. Okay got the website address. It is at - take flight tomorrow.org
Appearances can be deceiving. It's not. When every contract that has been up for negotiation (minus one IIRC) has had concessions, it's not. The whole FFD model is broken. And the whipsaw will continue, so those that negotiate the contract with mainline can keep their cushy salary and jobs, at the cost of those below them. I'll believe it's happening when FO pay actually changes to a livable wage.
Appearances can be deceiving. It's not. When every contract that has been up for negotiation (minus one IIRC) has had concessions, it's not. The whole FFD model is broken. And the whipsaw will continue, so those that negotiate the contract with mainline can keep their cushy salary and jobs, at the cost of those below them. I'll believe it's happening when FO pay actually changes to a livable wage.