deadstick
Well-Known Member
It's not though, as seen by the recent pay raises, hiring bonuses and retention bonuses. We get it, you hate AMF. my advice...let it go.
Just for the Frozen reference...
It's not though, as seen by the recent pay raises, hiring bonuses and retention bonuses. We get it, you hate AMF. my advice...let it go.
Very amusing to me about all the kiddos complaining about the ATP rule, yet the IFR 135 mins, which is what you REALLY needed to get that first job outside of instructing, has been 1200 hours forever.
There are serious compensation issues at all levels, to be sure, but the true fail is the top end compensation. When I was humpin' to get my time, a typical major job had:
Fab pay....at a inflation adjusted level rate they still haven't matched.
PAID retirement good for life (in theory). Zero contribution. THIS. WAS. HUGE. Anything you saved was gravy/beer money.
Paid heathcare. Paid as in ZERO premium.
Steady/stable-ish progression.
GOOD work rules.
Sure there was the age 60 retirement...but you were set with a 12k/mo pension benefit, so who cared? Go out and enjoy life before you get a cane. Still want to fly? Buy a Cessner.
Not only was this typical, but there were lots of places to go: Besides AMR, DAL and UAL, you had CAL, NWA, TWA, BNF, EAL, AAA, PAL, etc. Lots of places to choose from. Even when a few dropped off after de-regulation, there were still a host of places to go, and cargo to boot. Keep your nose clean, punch your card, and chances are you WOULD wind up somewhere.
These days, not so much. You could find yourself on a career off-ramp fairly easily. Everything is ratcheting down. Money is just OK, and you have to bust your ass to get it. You have to work until forever, and a downturn in the market at the wrong time leaves you working in retirement at Wally Mart. Seems like every day you go to work, some new PITA action comes up.
For anyone even considering this business, there are DARN few career-level options...DAL/UAL/AMR/SWA, plus FDX/UPS. Some off-brands, but even those are few and far-between. Everything else in the biz blows. Sure, some "regionals" claim to be career level, but for the effort, you can have a MUCH better gig doing practically anything else.
People tolerated the regional/commuter/cargo crap-o-la because of the pot of gold and the end. Now that it's been replaced with the pot of bronze, yea, not so much.
So a big hearty "duh" to all the pundits and heavy thinking consultants.
Richman
I made good money when I did it, in a Metro. Most other companies pay decent for an entry level position too. I can only think of two off the top of my head that pay crap. MAC and AMF. One of them just did something about it. I suspect the other will soon follow suit.
Agreed. But it took 40+ years to get this way, so it'll probably take 40+ to see it similar again. It will never be the same though.
Very amusing to me about all the kiddos complaining about the ATP rule, yet the IFR 135 mins, which is what you REALLY needed to get that first job outside of instructing, has been 1200 hours forever.
There are serious compensation issues at all levels, to be sure, but the true fail is the top end compensation. When I was humpin' to get my time, a typical major job had:
Fab pay....at a inflation adjusted level rate they still haven't matched.
PAID retirement good for life (in theory). Zero contribution. THIS. WAS. HUGE. Anything you saved was gravy/beer money.
Paid heathcare. Paid as in ZERO premium.
Steady/stable-ish progression.
GOOD work rules.
Sure there was the age 60 retirement...but you were set with a 12k/mo pension benefit, so who cared? Go out and enjoy life before you get a cane. Still want to fly? Buy a Cessner.
Not only was this typical, but there were lots of places to go: Besides AMR, DAL and UAL, you had CAL, NWA, TWA, BNF, EAL, AAA, PAL, etc. Lots of places to choose from. Even when a few dropped off after de-regulation, there were still a host of places to go, and cargo to boot. Keep your nose clean, punch your card, and chances are you WOULD wind up somewhere.
These days, not so much. You could find yourself on a career off-ramp fairly easily. Everything is ratcheting down. Money is just OK, and you have to bust your ass to get it. You have to work until forever, and a downturn in the market at the wrong time leaves you working in retirement at Wally Mart. Seems like every day you go to work, some new PITA action comes up.
For anyone even considering this business, there are DARN few career-level options...DAL/UAL/AMR/SWA, plus FDX/UPS. Some off-brands, but even those are few and far-between. Everything else in the biz blows. Sure, some "regionals" claim to be career level, but for the effort, you can have a MUCH better gig doing practically anything else.
People tolerated the regional/commuter/cargo crap-o-la because of the pot of gold and the end. Now that it's been replaced with the pot of bronze, yea, not so much.
So a big hearty "duh" to all the pundits and heavy thinking consultants.
Richman
I just can't bring myself to care. The entire industry has made the prospects becoming a pilot so bad for so long, to the point that an entire generation hasn't bothered to learn how to fly, and those that already can are doing other things. They dug this hole, they can dig themselves out, or go bankrupt because there's no bodies for the seats, either way I don't care.
Kids can fly airplanes on their iPhones, they're just not interested in the real thing anymore. Sad but true.
Why is it that the loudest people whining are the people who currently have been employed in aviation during a period of unprecedented opportunities for advancement and change, right @KLB ?
Agreed, I would not change anything.
What's good money?
Enough to support a family of 4, pay down debt instead of rack it up, and live a decent life.
I just had to. He's throwing another "poo poo the industry, even when change is happening!" tantrum. Who really gives a crap if management gives whatever reason for it.
Sounds boring!The guy I'm flying with thinks that I'm mighty confident when I tell him that my current aircraft is the easiest aircraft I've ever trained for and flown.
My response to him was "this plane is fully automated, the systems are simple, and it fixes and secures itself for just about 90% of the issues that may arise. It's one engine performance is better than the metro's 2 Engine performance...with CAWI. Landing this plane is like putting it down on a runway made of pillows. I'm not being confident, I'm just being honest."