DeltaJulietTango
Well-Known Member
NetJets has 91 MSpecs and 135 OpSpecs...but you know many former NetJets dispatchers...so you'd know that, right?@DeltaJulietTango This is the definition of flight following! You can dig through the 8900 to also find the FAA's ADI Guidance for what Flight following is, and how it is a requirement for both flight dispatchers and flight followers (121 Supp). Aside from that reference, the only difference between dispatchers and flight followers is who ultimately has operational control (which at most carriers, even a supplemental release is treated the same as a DOM/FLAG with the joint operational control occurring between the dispatcher and PIC and outlined in a GOM/FOM). The other main difference is you have a flight release (SUPP) versus a Dispatch Release (DOM/FLAG). Anything else does not fall under 121 guidance. As far as I know, NetJets is not a 121 carrier - they are 91 - therefore you really are just a flight planner. Your certificate would not (and should not) be on the line in the event of an incident/accident. Want further clarification? Reach out to FAA Legal and ask for an interpretation.
The CH4 reference just talks about a centralized dispatch/flight following facility. No other mention of operational control duties. You just need a certificate to work there and must furnish it if requested by the administrator.
As far as you statement of being at the bottom of the list for 15 years....that is far from the truth. I've been at my carrier for almost 14. I am far from the bottom of the list - within the top 50% and we have little to no turnover except for retirements. Major's offer a slew of benefits and better pay scales than most 91 operators since they have rock solid contracts that are only getting better every few years since they play catch-up with one another. The majority would indicate a major is the apex of one's career because they are so many other opportunities aside from line dispatching - ATC Coordinator, Sector Manager, Chiefs, Leadership. You cannot really get that at a P91. The folks I have known that come from NetJets, agree, they are not really dispatching since there is little to no flight following being done, which is 50% of the job. And that number came from an ADI...so I will take the FAA's word and figures over yours.
NJUSA generally operates under the more restrictive 135 OpSpecs...and NetJets dispatchers exercise operational control.
The rest of your post is subjective...and your opinion mixed in with "i heard" and a reference to the 8900.
49 USC 44748 actually uses the word "air carrier"...not "121 air carrier"...and while I know that seems like it's splitting hairs...it's an important distinction...and when it is implemented in 14 CFR, it will require that dispatchers and flight followers with dispatch certificates be used at all air carriers...since that's the law.