BobDDuck
Island Bus Driver
I was so sure the filter was going to catch it. Score one for adult words!
Which leads me to believe that there will be more consolidation with more FFDCs.
Dude, sometimes I think you argue just because you like to argue. Are we discussing "how" or "why"? We can discuss both, but not at the same time.
For now, I'm going to focus on "why".
I'm saying that there may be an opportunity to change the rules of the game. Airlines don't give credit for experience. It's my understanding that there are many in this industry, including myself, who would prefer it otherwise. Assuming that is true, the current environment offers an opportunity to do so. Airlines are having difficulty recruiting. Offering credit for previous experience benefits the employee for obvious reasons. It benefits the company by giving them a recruiting tool. And it removes the economic incentive for mainlines to shift flying from one regional to another, which benefits all. In any event, I think it's something worthy of further exploration.
As to the "how", my answer is "I don't know." But there are some smart people at ALPA who do.
If you are a Captain, are you still a Captain at your new airline? Or an FO but making the same Captain pay from your last place?
As I envisioned it, a pilot with 7 years of experience starts at year 7 (8?) on the payscale. Whether you start as a First Officer or Captain would depend on the individual company.
This would actually probably not incentivize companies to hire the "best and most experienced" pilots to be honest. If this were the case, I'd fully suspect that companies would actively try to not hire guys with too much time, which might actually make aviation less safe. Just a thought.
Lol, well, this is likely true.That's okay. They'd never agree to it in the first place.
The root of the issue of the lack of ability for lateral movement is generated by our extended pay scales. Going from $118 to $29 per hour just isn't a realistic option for pretty much anybody. If the company begins making decisions that are detrimental to a pilot's life, generally the only real option is to ride it out and hope it doesn't ruin your life.
Compress pay scales, and people can move between jobs with significantly less loss. When people can move between jobs, management has to pay for training cycles and deal with ungodly attrition numbers. When management has to pay for training cycles and catastrophic attrition, they have to actually pay attention to how their decisions are effecting their employees.
I understand the idea that at a major airline, people will spend far more time at the top of the pay scale than at any other spot, which is why it's important. That doesn't even remotely apply to 90% of pilots at regionals. For these airlines, it would behoove us to negotiate flat dollar-amount pay increases rather than percentages, and begin negotiating away the bottom years of the pay scale. If you have to give up a year at the top for 2 years at the bottom, so be it. I can tell you that I'd rather make 80k and have the opportunity to go to a new company and make 55k, rather than make 100k and be looking at 25k if I change jobs.
The root of the issue of the lack of ability for lateral movement is generated by our extended pay scales. Going from $118 to $29 per hour just isn't a realistic option for pretty much anybody. If the company begins making decisions that are detrimental to a pilot's life, generally the only real option is to ride it out and hope it doesn't ruin your life.
Compress pay scales, and people can move between jobs with significantly less loss. When people can move between jobs, management has to pay for training cycles and deal with ungodly attrition numbers. When management has to pay for training cycles and catastrophic attrition, they have to actually pay attention to how their decisions are effecting their employees.
I understand the idea that at a major airline, people will spend far more time at the top of the pay scale than at any other spot, which is why it's important. That doesn't even remotely apply to 90% of pilots at regionals. For these airlines, it would behoove us to negotiate flat dollar-amount pay increases rather than percentages, and begin negotiating away the bottom years of the pay scale. If you have to give up a year at the top for 2 years at the bottom, so be it. I can tell you that I'd rather make 80k and have the opportunity to go to a new company and make 55k, rather than make 100k and be looking at 25k if I change jobs.
I've worked outside of aviation, and that's not a picnic either.The only real solution to happiness is to simply not work in aviation, at least full time. This job is best worked on a part time, hobbyist basis.
I was under the impression that one of the things airline professionals lamented was the lack of portability of their careers. I know I do. Judging from the responses to this thread, that seems not to be the case. If that's how it is, then so be it. But I think it's a mistake to continue taking the short view. It was the short view that the allowed the RJ's nose under the tent.
Flying Saluki said:I was under the impression that one of the things airline professionals lamented was the lack of portability of their careers. I know I do. Judging from the responses to this thread, that seems not to be the case. If that's how it is, then so be it. But I think it's a mistake to continue taking the short view. It was the short view that the allowed the RJ's nose under the tent.
Again, I don't understand the "hate" about RJs. While some routes will be replaced with larger jets, many of the routes (along with the jobs), will disappear if RJs go away or become too costly. I remember one quip from a mainline pilot. "We don't want to operate the RJs. We just know it will be too costly to run them if we get control of them."
Nonsense (at the desire to fly RJ's). If it pays correctly, people will fly them. Mainline management will only offer so much though, so they won't be brought on property and the union is fine with that at the risk of regional airlines being able to fulfill their commitment and having the staffing. Currently the gamble is paying off.
Perhaps you individually but I have heard the sentiment expressed more than once over the years along with "No way will my squadron mates be willing to fly a small jet." Of course the DRJ is kind of a small jet... and many of those pilots piss and moan about the routes.