No, I'm sure they didn't get their checks docked, nor should they.
But they were unsafe!?! So now not only are safe average pilots paid the same, but also unsafe ones? Wow! What a great deal!
(let me add, I'm glad this is the case, for my sake!!)
It's not about someone accepting the pay and working conditions. It's about whether you're willing to fight to make it better. Will you strike to improve conditions at your carrier? Or will you back down like most other regional pilots have?
Oh I see. OK buddy.
Let's look at reality.
Step 1...strike. Step 2...lose flying. Step 3...go out of business, start over as first year F/O somewhere else (if you're lucky).
ALPA has a horrible reputation when it comes to striking at commuters.
Comair. ACA. AWAC. XJT. All have ceased to exist or lost significant amounts of flying after making strides in their contract. What incentive does ALPA give for striking these days?
Here's the deal at my commuter. Except for the top 10% or so, we all hope to be able to jump ship before our contract ends with our major partner. We know we are much more expensive than other carriers and this will translate into a non-renewal of our contract. Pinnacle alone is on the order of $60/hr per crew or $30/hr per pilot cheaper than we are. Replacing our flying with Pinnacle aircraft will save $21 million a year to the mainline partner, and that is just accounting for pilot costs. F/A costs will be less, mx costs will be less (mechanics here make decent money, I have to assume more than Pinnacle) etc. etc.
There is simply *no* possible way under our current system to continually "jack up the house" as you call it. Short term gain turns into unemployment. I would love to do it but I also like getting paid. If others will do my job I might as well keep doing it without going back to first year pay at a commuter. There will always be another Gulfstream FO willing to pay for some flight time (it is, after all, cheaper than renting!) or a Pinnacle F/O looking at that short upgrade time and not caring about the 2nd, 3rd, or 4th year FO pay or not getting block or better or having no duty or trip rigs.
Because experience has value.
It certainly does, but the only people that care are the flying public. See below.
As you know, portable longevity is something that we're working on. Experience should count for something when moving on to a new company. However, there's also the question of whether company loyalty factors into the equation, and I think it should. Longevity should not transfer on a one-for-one basis, in my opinion.
But *forcing* a company to pay based on past experience due to union bargaining proves my point. The company doesn't care about experience. outside of their required mins. What experience will get you is an interview, but that doesn't translate into higher pay which goes against everything the free market stands for.
And I hate to tell you this, but if the company can hire 500 TT pilots that get thru training and in the same class hire high time CFI's and
current 121 pilots that
don't make it thru training, (this happened in my class) the experience card has zero merit.