Fly4Pay
New Member
People defend the low-timer in the cockpit using the military as an example. However, we just aren't trained that extensively and that specialized. The military also has alot more resources, better standardization, training devices, methods, etc...list goes on and on why the military aviator is a better animal than us civilian trained folks.
SO... as a soon-to-be-former military pilot (ok, I guess I'm ALREADY "former", since I've flown my last flight), the thing that I want to try to sort out is: HOW do we bring the success of military training to commercial flying?
It's obvious that going by time isn't the answer--you could get in a 152, lean that sucker out, and fly at best endurance till you got 4000 hours, and it wouldn't make you qualified to fly a jet around. We ran into the same thing in the AF--a guy hits the "magic number" to upgrade to aircraft commander, and squadron leadership (who more often than not was NOT a pilot), would say the person should be an AC! The way we dealt with it was the "pilot mafia" had some say on who upgrades and who doesn't. If a person had the required time but showed poor decision-making or leadership ability, he'd get bypassed for upgrade. On the other hand, if someone knew their stuff and was ready for the challenge, we'd push to get a waiver and upgrade them early.
Now, hiring requirements are a different beast, I agree, but the same sort of thing needs to happen. As someone else mentioned, the hours just get you the interview--not the job. What needs to happen is that chief pilots and training directors need to look at a lot more than a logbook before making a hire. You can learn a LOT about a person in an interview. They need to really find out what a person is made of before hiring.
BUT... the root of the problem is that this is still a business, and the bottom line still rules. Yes, I agree I'd rather have more experienced people in the cockpit (and therefore better paid), but the fact is that we continue to get the job done, even with low-timers and low wages. What motivation is there for the business to make more restrictions on themselves? Business owners are looking for one thing--to maximize profits. Now, before someone hops in and says that safety is important too, let me say that I agree--but as of now, that safety hasn't been compromised.
I know what Seggy meant when he started this thread, talking about bets and all, and I ALSO know that he didn't mean it literally. But I also know what he means--it's only a matter of time till something like that happens. And sadly, THAT is the only thing that is going to change matters--an effect on the bottom line.