v1valarob
Well-Known Member
Everybody is up in arms because nobody can swap or drop things because of "below minimum reserve staffing"
Welcome to Colgan.
Everybody is up in arms because nobody can swap or drop things because of "below minimum reserve staffing"
AWAC hired about 20 I think.
It's so competitive out there right now it's like they're hiring for the majors. There was a guy who posted that he worked @ AWAC and applied just for fun and immediately got rejected.
Not like when I was hired, they were taking anyone (example: me)!! I think it was like 10 days from me applying to SITTING in class. Crazy times.
But "statistics are trending upwards!"
That's sorta like how our "unplanned absences" are "returning to normal levels." Um....if it's unplanned, how can it have ANY level, much less a normal one?
That's sorta like how our "unplanned absences" are "returning to normal levels." Um....if it's unplanned, how can it have ANY level, much less a normal one?
Sure you can still forecast fatigue calls and stuff.
There's most likely a baseline, and a primary factor or 2. For fatigue its probably average hours per month and average layover length. So you make a formula:
# of calls = A + B* total hours/# of pilots + C* avg layover length.
Where A, B, and C are coefficients that can be modeled using historical data.
For most of the time while I was at Mesa the "minimum reserve" number (where you couldn't do swaps or trades unless the reserves were greater or equal to this.) wasn't published. One day it was accidently published on FLiCA and the minimum reserve they wanted was MORE than the number of total reserve pilots in our base.
No wonder I could never do trades!!
Sure you can still forecast fatigue calls and stuff.
There's most likely a baseline, and a primary factor or 2. For fatigue its probably average hours per month and average layover length. So you make a formula:
# of calls = A + B* total hours/# of pilots + C* avg layover length.
Where A, B, and C are coefficients that can be modeled using historical data.