Trip7
Well-Known Member
all the interviews are going to go by the good ol' boy network.
Really fixed it for ya!
all the interviews are going to go by the good ol' boy network.
Hiring 100 people a month is probably somewhere near the max capacity for their training department, even if you're talking about running Denver and Houston at the same time. Heck, it might be OVER their max capacity for training.
United posted a half billion dollar loss this quarter as well. Think 2007-2008.
Not even close. Even AirTran could put that many people through training when necessary. Pre-9/11, all of the legacies were doing well over 100 per month (maybe not AAA; can't remember for sure).
Sounds like a vicious cycle.I had a united pilot on the jumpseat out of PNS and he says they are already really short, but their instructors are all out flying the line so they can't really do any hiring.
How many sims do you guys have?
I had a united pilot on the jumpseat out of PNS and he says they are already really short, but their instructors are all out flying the line so they can't really do any hiring.
I think it's three 717 sims, and a couple of 737 sims. But we weren't limited by that. We sent pilots to Long Beach for 717 sim at times, and to a bunch of different places for 737 sim.
We've got three also, and we've filled up Hobby, St. Louis and Orlando for Flight Safety and have never been able to get more than 80 new hires through per month from what I've seen. The problem is upgrades, I think. While they're doing those 80 new hires per month, they're upgrading 40, all while trying to make sure that regular RPC's get done.
Sim space has seemingly always been our limitation, as the company seems willing (when push comes to shove) to get the instructors back to the school house when necessary.
Running instructors full time is very, very expensive. I'm not sure how it works there, but, our guys used to double up sims, and walk home with 160 hours/month + 1200+hours per diem. Running one sim 3 shifts a day, 7 days a week like that takes at least 5 instructors... the IP bill on one sim running full time for us is close to 60k/month. I cant imagine 3+ sims at a legacy.
Airlines never seem to like buying out more IP's for a month. high costs with low utilization... but eventually (when it's too late) they will
I had a friend that went to the fltops job fare and the recruiters there were clear about telling everyone they weren't hiring this year.
(This question is aimed at them, not you) then why do they have a table at a job fair?
that's in accordance with the full time buy. Should be 12 days off, 4 hard with that ( unless they changed it)Pinnacle's offering to buy off line pilots to teach sims and GFS now. Just based on straight time with no extra shifts picked up, it's 100+ hours of credit a month. Since you're not flying, there's no limit to what you can pick up on top of that. Hell, you could pick up flying out of open time if you wanted to. If you're out of domicile, it's 24/7 per diem. If the commute from MCO to MEM wasn't so insane, I'd probably do it.
My Dad said the CEO wants to get max productivity out of the new contract because they want to avoid hiring, and want everyone to get junior manned, 99 hours, etc.
It sounds like the UAL guys will not take the CAL work rules ever, and want the scope, rules, and pay to actually be something they gain this time around, not give up.
He has been shining up his striking shoes from the late 80s.