[ QUOTE ]
Seat lock does not apply to upgrade. If you meet the 2500 TT which includes 1000 121 crew-time and ATP written, you may upgrade.
C. The Company reserves the right to relieve a Pilot from a freeze if operational
requirements determine that need."
[/ QUOTE ]
Reeeeeally?! I wonder why on the Standing Bid list, under my upgrade bid, my "freeze end date" is listed as 12 months from the date of my transition? I'm glad to hear the seat-lock doesn't apply to upgrades (since that's not the impression I had before) but I wonder if the people awarding the bids are aware of this fact!? Any ideas as to why this is shown on the standing bid list, Chris?
As to the original subject of this thread, I'm a SLC CRJ FO. I've been with the company just under 2 years, I transitioned from the EMB-120 to the jet at my 1 year mark about a month before my sim partner (same seniority -1) took the Brasilia upgrade.
Financially, it's been just about a wash since I've held good paying lines as an FO and he's been mostly on reserve. This month I'm flying mostly local trips and after taking 2 vacation days I will have had 17 days off!
(this is atypical for my schedule, I bid just under the 1/2 mark in SLC) If you want to be able to afford a house and have a wife and baby at home (in SLC at least), while enjoying a reasonably good quality of life, transitioning to jet FO makes sense. Add to that the opportunity to gain a reasonable comfort level in the airplane before upgrading and for me it was a good move.
True, it's possible to get PIC time faster if you stay in the Bro. but you will likely be on reserve a very long time, and if you sacrifice your quality of life in order to further your career it is easy to find yourself missing out on the most important things in life.
I spent the first 4 years of my flying career with advancement as my top priority. I worked my heiney off to be the best FO I could be, while looking forward to my 18-month Jet upgrade (pre 9/11 Coex). Then 9/11 happened and after 2 years of furlough and going through two companies, I've learned the importance of family and the extremely fickle nature of this industry.
SkyWest is a great company. In my opinion though, the failure to pay newhires is an abomination. It embarasses me that our company is unwilling to invest in it's (potentially) greatest asset. The pay agreement that Chris spoke of at the end of '04 has come nowhere near fruition 7 months later and in fact, the final offer from the company was a 1.2% raise for the CRJ pilots (no chance of splitting the 50 and 70-seat rates) and nothing for the Brasilia. After 4-years at the same rates, the "18-month" 70-seat TA, and a company setting record profits, many pilots consider 1.2% a major slap in the face. Personally, my health insurance costs have risen more than the 1.2% they are offering. (for me it ends up being about $35 a paycheck raise)To be fair, management has decided to include the pilots in a new bonus program, but you only qualify after you've been with the company longer than two years. So if they want to call that a pay raise, it doesn't apply to the roughly 30% of our pilots who've been hired in the last 2 years (who didn't get paid in training!)
These are just two of many issues that SkyWest pilots need to face in the current environment. Please don't assume that I am bad-mouthing the company. SkyWest is a great place to work and I am happy to have a job there. The pay is reasonably good (for the 50-seat jet) and the quality of life can be pretty good if you don't commute, the training department is top-notch and the aircraft are well-maintained. We have a management team that is focused on long-term growth and not just quick personal gain (that's what happens when you keep a CEO for 30 years!) We are in a great position financially and have continued growth plans through spring of '06. For those of you that want to come here, it's a great opportunity. I would just like you to understand some of the real-world concerns of many members of the pilot group. I'll never forget one of the first Captains I flew with on the jet. He had been on reserve in SLC for 2 years as a captain. He was miserable. The whole trip, all he could talk about was how he and his fiance were starting a doggy day-care and he couldn't wait to quit SkyWest so he could go do that instead. I don't think I could do it (though there are times when I understand it), but I wish him well.
Good luck to all the SkyWest hopefuls. We need more eager, energetic,
proactive optimists.