:yup: Oh boy, you are so far from the truth! I want you to ask all the guys from DCA who have come to Comair, if they were airline employees while working as CFI's at DCA, and kept their "seniority" at Comair. And go ahead and ask the others that went to all the other regionals the same question. Sorry dude but you've been snorting the Kool-Aide powder before they even get to mix it up and give it to you!:cwm27:The CFI's are employed as airline employees here. Its always been that way dispite peoples 'opinions' about the schools ownership.
What's the difference if someone worked for an airline in another capacity,(say a mechanic)while working for that company, they got their ratings. Then they get an interview with that company, got hired and they got to keep their seniority hire date from when they started working for that company originally? Remember, there have been few airlines that have had flow through agreements in the past.
You didn't specify.I'm not talking about the DCA thing. MmmmKay.
I'm saying, if you while working for Comair as a mechanic or other job, got the rest of your ratings (right now) then interviewed for an FO job with that company, your going to lose all your seniority or aren't you? I know of several cases in which pilots have trained while working on the ramp and other areas for regional airlines, then interviewed for and FO spot and never lost their seniority with the company.
RedBaron made this statement:
"plus significantly reduce the time spent physically on reserve @ Comair!"
That can only mean advance placement on the pilot seniority list, not just employee seniority.
What does "physically on reserve" mean, anyway? Is there some kind of non-physical reserve I haven't heard about?
That DCA memo has about much worth as a Braniff/Ozark/Pan Am stock option.
This is the smartest thing I've read in this thread so far. Why can't people see this for what it is? It's sneaky, slimy DCA scheme. The academy is going to pay you your 70% AFTER you finish your contract? WTF is this?
Here's a simple EASY answer that even DCA cannot SCREW UP! No tricky contract needed. Pay your instructors NORMAL rates. Allow them the opportunity to eat. They'll do their time, and move on. If they choose to leave early because the regionals are taking 200hr wonders, guess what? The system works. Potential new students will see this and say, "WOW! DCA got that dumbass with 200 hrs a job. Maybe I should go there too. Where can I give my 80K to? " This is just a cycle, in a couple of years, you won't be able to BUY a 20thou a year job working at a regional.
Everybody wins.
On the other hand, no one is asking the REAL question why the regionals need pilots so bad to start with. Do you really see THAT many people retiring from the majors and actually jumping from the captain's seat on a RJ just to start all over as a CP with a crap senority number at a major?
This isn't why they need pilots folks. It's about the MONEY! Just like DCA!
20K a year is GARBAGE money. People ARE beginning to see the light and bigger pilot shortages are coming.
"Hope this helps you understand. And move on to more important issues..."
Ahhh, nice try to sweep this under the carpet, where it belonged all along, but seniority to airline pilots IS an important issue.
Seems like none of the DCA management types want to come out an answer my question. Not surprised, if they were smart, they never would have mentioned any of this in the first place and just let it pop up one day at the DCA website.
"There is, and there was not, an ill intent regarding the "get hired but still work at the Academy" deal"
Easy for you to say. Hard for me to believe. I think DCA's marketing has been full of "ill intent" since I started posting at this site and read my first flight training magazine. The difference is Planedive looks at it from the standpoint of a DCA manager, and I look at it from the standpoint of an airline pilot who knows better. It's all a matter of perspective.
Let us know in a couple of years after you leave the "academy" and see the real life how your perspective changes...You can twist my post to fit your bashing needs anyway you want. The only thing you cannot really change is the fact that DCA graduates have been getting hired by Top Tier Regional cariers longer than you have been trying to make people see it from "the airline pilot's perspective" in this site.
Before being a "manager" I was a student and full time instructor and seen the inner works at the Academy and understand the place better than most of you. And the management position was always a temporary deal for me. I got my class date at a regional and don't need to sell or "defend" the Academy. But it saddens me that people like you insist on bashing the place based on hearsay.
Let us know in a couple of years after you leave the "academy" and see the real life how your perspective changes...![]()
I'll be honest, I haven't been keeping up with this discussion that seems to have been going on between you and DE72...I was only pointing to the fact that you are "management" for a school and have yet to see what a line pilot would see. Perspective is everything.I am hoping it will... I do meet a lot of Alumni from the Academy that come to visit. Some are now in the Majors, some flying cargo of corporate... A few complain about how expensive it was, but none complain about the training.
Thanks anyway