Improved non-rev priority.
What's so different about scheduling out of curiosity? I know both regionals and majors fly from roughly 5am-1am so how are the schedules that much different? Longer overnights? Shorter duty days?
Regionals disadvantages: training dept can be a poop show, benefits for health/dental/nonrev can be close to a joke, management completely detached from reality, line pilots unhappy (endeavor had guys leaving for jobs outside the industry at one point in disturbing numbers), unsafe hotels while playing hotel roulette, no support with passengers during IROPS.Everyone complains about the regionals. Take away the difference in pay and then compare them. What would the major differences be?
BobDDuck said:Not always the case. Over the years I bumped more than a few USAirways guys out of seats in the back, whilst still working at a regional.
Regionals disadvantages: training dept can be a poop show, benefits for health/dental/nonrev can be close to a joke, management completely detached from reality, line pilots unhappy (endeavor had guys leaving for jobs outside the industry at one point in disturbing numbers), unsafe hotels while playing hotel roulette, no support with passengers during IROPS.
Regionals are odd, they exist because they are cheap and the overwhelming majority of pilots will take the abuse. It's a short term business model that can't survive much longer without retention pay, but in some cases the extra pay makes them too expensive to keep running and the flying will go back to mainline.
More details needed. Was it on YOUR metal or mainline? If mainline, Im impressed but - you were at a wholly owned? So, who knows...but Delta sure knows how to take care of ITS employees.
Didn't matter what metal it was. As long as it said USAirways somewhere on the plane, my non rev priority was the same category as the mainline guy's... pure date of hire. I was at a WO.
They obviously had priority for the jumpseat if it was a mainline airplane.
I don't know of any contract carrier that doesn't have priority for the jumpseat on its own metal (e.g. PSA pilot on a PSA plane pm and so on), wholly owned or not.
Everyone complains about the regionals. Take away the difference in pay and then compare them. What would the major differences be?
Didn't matter what metal it was. As long as it said USAirways somewhere on the plane, my non rev priority was the same category as the mainline guy's... pure date of hire. I was at a WO.
They obviously had priority for the jumpseat if it was a mainline airplane.