Good.
Isn't that his 1st amendment right? 8)jtrain609 said:Wait...you...what? Don't you work at "bottom feeding" PSA? You can't tell the world to ingest a large bag of phallic objects about your decisions to go to a regional that is nearly universally hated, and then cheer another regional voting down a contract.
Wait...you...what? Don't you work at "bottom feeding" PSA?
You can't tell the world to ingest a large bag of phallic objects about your decisions to go to a regional that is nearly universally hated, and then cheer another regional voting down a contract.
Isn't that his 1st amendment right? 8)
Why not?
Do I agree with their vote a couple of years ago? No.
You sure do spend a lot of time defending said vote on a certain other site.
I understand why they voted the way they did. Market forces are completely different now however.
From how it sounds it is a free upgrade to the current deal. Expect a yes vote.I hope my own pilot group has the sense to do the same with our upcoming TA.
I'm not sure I know what this means, when Mesa is turning stuff down it either means that it's really bad or tides are changing, maybe a bit of both. Regardless, it's interesting in the industry right now. I hope I get out before I'm directly affected by whatever it might be.
Which is why I hope to get out before it starts hitting the fanThe problem of course is that for places like Mesa and Republic, there is no more money in the banana stand. Regionals have bid with such thin margins for such a long time (to capture flying) there just isn't room for more pilot pay under the current system.
That leaves three options.
1) The regional goes to the mainline operator and says we need more money to cover out costs. (with probably very little success until EVERY regional providing feed has done the same thing)
2) The pilots take a contract based off of what a company can actually pay and not what they are actually worth.
3) The company goes out of business (because they can't staff)
Option 1 won't be happening because we are rapidly approaching the price point where it makes sense for the major to do the flying themselves and because there are still regionals with low enough overhead that they can continue to operate on the very thin margins of FFD.
Option 2 doesn't seem to be happening as pilots see how much money the major carriers are making and assume that a piece of that pie should be for them.
Option 3 hasn't happened yet as there are still, for a little bit longer anyway, plenty of stary eyed newbies who want to get into a jet.
Which is why I hope to get out before it starts hitting the fan
quite possiblyLeaving the airlines?
quite possibly
The money was IN the banana stand!The problem of course is that for places like Mesa and Republic, there is no more money in the banana stand. Regionals have bid with such thin margins for such a long time (to capture flying) there just isn't room for more pilot pay under the current system.
T
You'll be back, life on the outside ain't as pretty as it looks.
Everyone always comes back.