SlumTodd_Millionaire
Most Hated Member
My airplane is almost as big as yours, Todd. ALMOST! And yet, here I am, on YEAR 3, making $34.49/hr (and I'm lucky, because that's the higher rate over here).
Your airplane is a third smaller than mine, so you can't expect the same pay scale. Also, you're operating under a very old contract. With that said, you don't get paid anywhere near what you should, but that's not a B-scale, that's just the result of regional MECs not utilizing pattern bargaining following the Comair strike in '01.
Well, business 101 tells me that if you don't have any money .... you can't pay people anyways. So what's the point of crippling a company from the start.
Again, you're still assuming that industry-standard wages would "cripple" the company. I urge you to do some research to see just how little it would cost to pay their pilots an industry-standard wage. Don't fall into the management trap of believing that your wages are a big piece of the pie. Virgin America is now operating with positive cash flow. With just one quarter's worth of operating profits (a slow quarter, at that), Virgin America could pay every pilot an industry-standard wage. Still see the justification?