There went business class....![]()
OK, without trying to argue or change minds, the argument agin' PFT is that in that "scheme" to use the UK term (generously), the employer makes money off pilot training ALA Gulfstream Academy, vice requiring ratings. Unless you are a EU style cadet or military trained you have to PFT. SWA type requirement and Gulfstream are different in that way?Not going to argue here. I think it's PFT and NO ONE is going to change my mind.
No, PFT is pay for training. Yes, everybody does it to get your ratings. Once you are in a jet, a company should pay for it. If you see ads for Lears, etc., it means they want qualified people. They want time in type for a decent operator, and the lower rung operators want you to pay for your type. Some will train you. Those are good operators, however they are hard to find in this market. This is how you get time in type and type ratings in, jets, without PFT.OK, without trying to argue or change minds, the argument agin' PFT is that in that "scheme" to use the UK term (generously), the employer makes money off pilot training ALA Gulfstream Academy, vice requiring ratings. Unless you are a EU style cadet or military trained you have to PFT. SWA type requirement and Gulfstream are different in that way?
edit oops looks like Bumblebee summed it up already. Lack of SA on my part.
I know the difference. One is PFT and the other is PFJ.:beer:There is a huge difference from taking a seat that is required for operations and selling time in that seat or requiring a type rating as a prerequisite. To compare the two (GulfStream and SWA) is misleading, inaccurate and maybe you don't have a thorough understanding of the difference of paying for a job, and paying for a rating. (I think you do, but have just decided to be unreasonably resolute on this distinction)
I'm just really worried about the influence AirTran will have on SWA's company culture. The employees and management have a great relationship at WN. I see it on a daily basis where I work. Hopefully the AirTran employees will be able to roll right into their new workgroup with ease.
I'm just really worried about the influence AirTran will have on SWA's company culture. The employees and management have a great relationship at WN. I see it on a daily basis where I work. Hopefully the AirTran employees will be able to roll right into their new workgroup with ease.
In philosophy terms, it is a HUGE difference in degree if not in kind.I know the difference. One is PFT and the other is PFJ.:beer:
Having said that, enough about the PFT/PFJ...it's been discussed ad nauseum. It will be interesting to see how this all plays out over the next couple of years.
The only difference between SWA and lower rung operators is they pay well compared to other airlines now. Look at their pay back prior to all the bankruptcies and see how their pay was. Whether they pay $1, or $1 Million, it IS the definition of PFT. You must pay, whether SWA benefits or not, for the training to get the job, or have prior experience. Now, if SWA said you must have 500 time in type, then there would be no discussion, but since they encourage, and actually insist on you having the type before training without T.I.T., it is PFT.In philosophy terms, it is a HUGE difference in degree if not in kind.
SWA is not a lower rung operator (not sayin' you were sayin') by any stretch.
The only difference between SWA and lower rung operators is they pay well compared to other airlines now. Look at their pay back prior to all the bankruptcies and see how their pay was. Whether they pay $1, or $1 Million, it IS the definition of PFT. You must pay, whether SWA benefits or not, for the training to get the job, or have prior experience. Now, if SWA said you must have 500 time in type, then there would be no discussion, but since they encourage, and actually insist on you having the type before training without T.I.T., it is PFT.
There went business class....![]()
You must pay, whether SWA benefits or not, for the training to get the job, or have prior experience.
All DFW will be eliminated.... Due to some ruling in the day....
It's time for bed, but remember, in the 91 world, it would be up to the insurance company to determine how much the owner/operator would be charged to operate the airplane. This is the deciding factor on who works for a company....how much is the company going to pay for insurance, and do we have to pay for training (recurrent in a bit vs. initial now). Also, the company can ask for a lower price, in general, if somebody has no experience in the airplane.I really don't understand their program. They have to still do an initial though? I mean if you had a lear type you could fly part 91 if you were current. SWA still has to do the 121 training?? I don't know if the FAA cuts them a break on their syllabus since they all are typed??
Seems apples and oranges to me. But I must say: I dunno.
Hopefully, the deal will either be terminated, or done and marged successfully by 2014, so the Wright Amendment has no affect on this deal at this point in time. If, in 2014, the Amendment is repealed, then they can expand back into D/FW.Yeah, just read that. But again, interesting development with that amendment expiring in 2014...
irate:
It's time for bed, but remember, in the 91 world, it would be up to the insurance company to determine how much the owner/operator would be charged to operate the airplane. This is the deciding factor on who works for a company....how much is the company going to pay for insurance, and do we have to pay for training (recurrent in a bit vs. initial now). Also, the company can ask for a lower price, in general, if somebody has no experience in the airplane.
I do not know why SWA still has their PFT scheme. Most airlines have abandoned that approach, post mid 1990's, most with the help of the unions (Surreal, did you get wood?:beer
. SWA has stuck to what they started with...you must start with a type, whether you have time in the airplane or not.
As for the 91/135 world, there are some "bad operators" and some decent ones. Just remember, it is definitely an employer's market right now. I cannot wait until this reverses, if ever. I have been watching the industry since the 1980's, and, other than the hick-up in '06-07'ish at the regional level, for the most part, it has been an employers' market.
I do not know, and I am not really worried about it. I, along with everybody on here, have no control over it. I was just responding to SWA and PFT.:beer:
You remember the mid 90's, right? How were the PFT schemes set up then? You went to FSI or some other school and paid for your own training. The school passed you as long as your "check cleared", and you went to initial for your airline who was waiting in the wings, in some cases, to get you. In other cases, you went to training to hope to get on with an airline.I don't necessarily see SWA as PFT, since to me, requiring a 737 type is no different than requiring an ATP....simply a prerequisite.
And it's not PFJ, because having the 737 type is no guarantee that you get the job. If you were automatically hired with a 737 type or were paying to get a type from them and it happened to come with a job, then that'd be different IMO. the type is simply a prerequisite in order to even vie for a spot on the team, no guarantees.