MOGuy424
Well-Known Member
Isn't all of that stuff exactly what doctors did for decades to keep their profession in check?
I think the airlines realize the 1,500 hr rule is going to dry up SOME of the pilots which may make it more difficult for regionals to staff and keep wages low. Why else would they fight the law and why else would 9E be looking for $29/hr the first year? Stop letting the airlines lower the experience bar to whatever they want to get people in the door and they'll have to do something to attract people.
Well said.
Doctor, Lawyer, and Pilot. Dream jobs? Prestigious Jobs? What is the difference between them? To be a doctor or a lawyer you must be an acceptionally bright individual and have the accademic performance to even be considered for acceptance into such educational programs. Flight schools should employ the same high standards as these other professions.
"So you would like to attend our university flight school? Great! Let us see here. High school GPA, 2.1, hmm. No extra curricular activities, hmm. No volunteer work or humanity contributions, hmm. Well you see in order to attend our professional pilot program you would have needed at least a 3.0 gpa in high school and in your undergrad classes. I'm sorry but you just are not the caliber we look for in pilots."
I'm not saying it should be as difficult to become a pilot as a doctor, but I know I went to school with some individuals who just squeaked by so they could be an "AIRLINE PILOT" and get "laid" more because chicks dig pilots (bet they got a rude awakening). They prestige of becoming a pilot has not come from the fact that people can fly cheaper than ever before, it is because the industry standard has dropped ungodly as to who can become a pilot. Because of this, the market become saturated with applicants who were willing to do anything for that turbine multi. Maybe if the standard for education requirements and the quality to which pilot applicants were held to was never reduced to what it is now, our industry would not be in such dismay.