Return on Invested CapitalWhats ROIC? Return On I? C?
Return on Invested CapitalWhats ROIC? Return On I? C?
gotcha thx!Return on Invested Capital
I understand that FOQ is a complete re-jiggering of AE's qualification (and that it is yielding some "interesting" results). I'm referring specifically to the contents of the ride. As I understand it, EM4 FOs did most of what Captains did under the old system with the exception of being checked on taxiing, no-flap landings, and a single-engine missed approach. Aside from those tasks not evaluated, the whole PC is flown to ATP standards anyway.How did you pass an ATP ride at AE when they didn't implement FOQ until August, and you left in June or July?
I understand that FOQ is a complete re-jiggering of AE's qualification (and that it is yielding some "interesting" results). I'm referring specifically to the contents of the ride. As I understand it, EM4 FOs did most of what Captains did under the old system with the exception of being checked on taxiing, no-flap landings, and a single-engine missed approach. Aside from those tasks not evaluated, the whole PC is flown to ATP standards anyway.
(This is how I understood it, that is.)
Where I am now, no retrains are permitted for the ATP; regular lowly FOs can retrain an event. Soon it won't matter anyway because everyone who works here will either have their ATP or be issued it on the conclusion of initial.
So wait, now sitting on piles of cash and making more piles of cash is a BAD business strategy? I confess that I don't have an MBA, but I thought that was a GOOD thing.
Agreed. If they are doing credits I just wish that 61 would get some too not just because the majority of my training was done 61, but as a 61 instructor this would kill my student load...and we do take the same tests. Spend 6 months at my old 141 school and tell me that it isn't an abomination.this whole 1500 hr thing is so confusing...
Regionals don't set the rates for their flying, they're paid a specified amount for every departure they do for their mainline carrier.
What WILL happen is that the mainline carriers won't pay the additional rates necessary to keep regionals afloat, the regionals will go bankrupt, and then mainline will take the flying back in house.
Exactly.
I don't see that happening. Regional cost = 8 cents per seat per mile while a typical mainline is 12 cents or more.
That doesn't matter if the front two seats are empty.
Oh wow, a JC'er saying there is going to be a pilot shortage? That's unusual.
(waiting for typical JC bandwagon reply..."been hearing of one coming for decades but it never happens and will never happen.")
Short pilots, but never a pilot shortage. There, obligation fulfilled.
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Short pilots, but never a pilot shortage. There, obligation fulfilled.
I think Tim Martin has at least all of that.I'm impressed. At the ripe age of 5, that kid is not only a captain, but is also a Marine with a parachutist badge. This kid makes us all look like hacks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parachutist_Badge_(United_States)#Navy_.26_Marine_Corps
When in doubt I choose to predict the future based on the past. I can think of one time only pilots were pulled off the street to fly for airlines in the past 50 years. Not great odds for the looming pilot shortage.
Oh wow, a JC'er saying there is going to be a pilot shortage? That's unusual.
(waiting for typical JC bandwagon reply..."been hearing of one coming for decades but it never happens and will never happen.")