EnrouteGuiseppe & PHL_Approach,
Stand down, this was just a drill. HR screwed up by reposting the opening and there is still only one as of now.
F9DXER,
Had two croak this year. One from MRSA, one from his Glock.
Flagship_dxer,
Yes, assistants are in CASS.
LawDXer,
No, the assistant dispatchers don't really make $25.04/hr, they make $25.37/hr. Looks like my calculator shorted them last time.
jet0052,
4-on/3-off fixed shifts bid annually. Relief is is totally different and I don't feeling like typing how it works.
g767,
In regards to your post:
YouTube Video
I can't believe you linked those ridiculous videos, and I don't even know where to begin with this misinformation. Our meteorologists are not an FAA approved weather source and don't write our TAFs. They don't even issue FMFs, the dispatchers do. We get our wx from Lido & WSI. Neither the shift manager nor the shift supervisor dispatch ANYTHING, the union shift lead dispatches the hot flights. Which is good since management would be hard pressed to get a flight from SDF-LEX. The best shift is whatever fits your lifestyle. Our international dispatchers have the highest workload of any I've heard, and our domestic try to keep less than 15 in the air at once but this is often exceeded. One of your instructors was the junior assistant dispatcher who was furloughed before he ever got a chance to dispatch, then was lured into taking a supervisor job less than a year later when none of us would. Stockholm syndrome I guess, because he would have been recalled, upgraded, and have people below him in seniority by now. Contingency consists mainly of hub/ramp supervisors who are "promoted" into this position with zero experience or credentials (and very little IQ), and I don't know what an IROP Team is. Those videos showed the back of two dispatchers' heads for less than 3 seconds, and that is as close to what it showed as life here as a UPS dispatcher.
Does anyone else have any reasonable questions about the job?