gotWXdagain
Polished Member
Which also must be paid.
Not necessarily, but several questions have to be met.
Which also must be paid.
Thanks, still doesn't apply to the original post. While pilots (unfortunately) "MAY" be exempt from overtime that doesn't mean a company can avoid paying them while in attending company indoc training which in all three cases I mentioned above is the case.
Sigh... only pilots.If it's a fairly large company, you can bet attorneys have already looked at it, and it's legal.
That's not how it works. The balance is between the cost of paying training against the liklihood of being fined and/or sued and the relevant costs.If it's a fairly large company, you can bet attorneys have already looked at it, and it's legal.
That's not how it works. The balance is between the cost of paying training against the liklihood of being fined and/or sued and the relevant costs.
When I think of all the money our company (Pt. 135 commuter) has squandered training wannabe pilots who either quit shortly after being hired because they simply couldn't handle the job or had to be fired due to incompetence I can only give thanks that we don't pay for training. It costs a huge amount of money to train someone and all that money goes down the drain when it turns out they can't hack it.
Aviation's not for everyone.
I think you win JC for today!Maybe if you paid for training you wouldn't be stuck with so many bottom feeders.
I think you win JC for today!![]()
When I think of all the money our company (Pt. 135 commuter) has squandered training wannabe pilots who either quit shortly after being hired because they simply couldn't handle the job or had to be fired due to incompetence I can only give thanks that we don't pay for training. It costs a huge amount of money to train someone and all that money goes down the drain when it turns out they can't hack it.
Aviation's not for everyone.
And a junky little 135 carrier may take 2 weeks to train you to standards assuming good weather, maintenance, as well as aircraft and instructor availability.I don't mind at all proving I am able to safely fly an aircraft without pay. If it takes me two weeks to prove it, well...I believe that is another topic.
And a junky little 135 carrier may take 2 weeks to train you to standards assuming good weather, maintenance, as well as aircraft and instructor availability.
What if a plane goes down, instructor gets sick, weather gets bad, etc., and it suddenly takes twice as long? You going to go four weeks without any income?
Better yet, what happens when you go to a better place that actually spends an appropriate amoun of time training you rather than just pooping out pilot crap as fast as possible? Are you going to go 6, 8, 12 weeks without a paycheck to "prove you can fly"?
It's no risk to the company if they hired a quality candidate. But you can't do that as a bottom feeder that doesn't pay for training.Heya, what's with the 135 racist statement? 121 ops can't be crapy?No no, if it takes me 6 weeks to prove I can fly I shouldn't have a commercial. I believe you read that wrong. As far as learning new systems and specs are concerned... it is a risk on both the pilot and the company financially. I have done many things for others without pay over the years, why change? It doesn't break who I am or what I choose to do. I know I have good moral rather than a crapy conscience to deal with. It's a win win for me. It's a bit like that crapy girl friend that bbelieves she got the best of you. Take what you get and give as much as you can or do nothing and be someone else.
I was a 135 CP so I'm pretty sure I'm familiar with crap 135 operations, and there are plenty of them. Definitely more than crap 121 operations.Heya, what's with the 135 racist statement? 121 ops can't be crapy?No no, if it takes me 6 weeks to prove I can fly I shouldn't have a commercial. I believe you read that wrong. As far as learning new systems and specs are concerned... it is a risk on both the pilot and the company financially. I have done many things for others without pay over the years, why change? It doesn't break who I am or what I choose to do. I know I have good moral rather than a crapy conscience to deal with. It's a win win for me. It's a bit like that crapy girl friend that bbelieves she got the best of you. Take what you get and give as much as you can or do nothing and be someone else.
Look, they are teaching you new things for free rather than you paying for the training. Eventually it will pay off in the long run. It shows dedication and good character which is more important than money.
kids...save it for mommy! How about a smiley...
CONFIDENCE is what it is about. Quality training, eh? OK ..I'm glad ya feel that way.
I remember being pampered too.
Look, all I'm saying is to take some happy pills and find something else to cry about, no pay training, so what! It's not like you lose half of everything you own, people get married for that!
Try not to blame others for your crappy inability to learn in the field you chose to be in. And we all should be rich too, eh? Where the hell is this damn culture going?
Stick it in a glory hole and stop crying about your shoe laces coming untied. Need more of these?