inigo88
Composite-lover
Not necessarily. Because BLS/ALS rigs do the same thing....911 transport from a scene to a hospital, just with a different level of care.
It's more like the difference between an ambulance working 911 and bringing patients to initial hospital care from pre-hospital (field) care; and an ambulance that's doing interfacility (hospital to hospital) transfers of more-or-less stable patients who have been in hospital care already. Since fixed-wing doesn't do "on scene" work, they're mainly the hospital to hospital transport work.
Sorry Mike I messed that up. In both places I've lived (Bay Area and Southern CA) all the ALS 911 pre-hospital contracts are done either by municipal or county fire dept owned ambulances, or giant companies like AMR or Rural Metro. The local "mom and pop" BLS private ambulance companies all have to fight for the left overs, which are the inter-facility transfers and random prison contracts and things like that. The end result was that all my EMT buddies had to "do their time" (that sounds familiar!

Anyway sorry for the OT, but I've always thought rotorcraft EMS or law enforcement flying (heck even being a TFO) would be one of the most fun and rewarding things one could do in aviation. Pilots in our nature have to spend so much time and money on ourselves, worrying about building experience, training costs, debt, work rules and QoL - it would be a welcome change to go into work and actually make a difference in someone else's life. That's why it's always cool to talk to you Mike, because you've done both those types of flying (along with a few others!).
jrh, it sounds like you're in a good spot. You have the experience to be competitive in whichever direction you choose to go, you just need to decide what matters to you and which aspect of the industry offers the best fit.
jrh said:Second, one of the core frustrations I have with many jobs across the industry has nothing to do with flying. It comes from what I see as a lack of respect by employers for their employees. This has factored in to my job decisions significantly, no matter if I realized it at the time or not. Back when I was running the flight school, I knew my boss and I had a deep respect for each other, which is one of the reasons I stayed as long as I did. When I decided to come to my current airline, all my research indicated they respected their pilot group and made an honest effort to treat them well, rather than use and abuse them to the fullest extent possible.
I couldn't agree more, and this simple fact has dramatically affected my own career goals as well. Pilots are professionals and need to be treated and compensated as such.