Does anyone have thoughts on using/working at Mesa to do some time building and get CRJ training? I've heard some people actually refer to Mesa as Skywest Pilot Development ( a play on the Mesa pilot dev school in NM), and the pay/lifestyle us about the same as working as a CFI... I realize they have a training contract, but it's still about the same price or cheaper than taking the CRJ or CFI course at ATP. FWIW, I have enough time to get on with Mesa but not enough for SkyW.
You wouldn't be the first nor would you be the last to time build at Mesa-
- you know you will be under a 1 year training contract - a lot of FO's leave Mesa anyway with less than 1 year - your year starts upon passing your checkride, not your class date. The training department is currently stretched thin and can't really train the replacements it needs so you may actually have a significant amount of time between your groundschool and your actual checkride date. As long as you're willing to live with the consequencies of leaving early, this shouldn't matter much to you. Mesa tries to collect first by holding your meager last paycheck, then they sell your contract to a collection agency who screws up your credit history.
- will you really get the time you need in 1 year at Mesa to get hired at Skywest? How much time do you need? How much flight time do you expect to get at Mesa in the one year? there are FOs who have been at Mesa for a year and haven't even gotten 200 hours in their first year - all they have to show for their year is a year's worth of airport appreciation on ready reserve
- can you make it through training? If you fail training, it is a 121 training failure and it is reported to every airline you apply to in the future when they ask for your PRIA records. It's not a show stopper, but you will need to be able to explain it to your future employers.
- you know about the lifestyle - 8 days off, never more than 2 days off in a row, noncommutable schedules, poor utilization, contract that is continually ignored, etc.
- Do you have your CFI already? if you are a CFI, you'd be better off instructing to get your time. Buy your time if you need to - fly IFR cross countries, work the national airspace system.
- Do you have the finances to survive two years of 1st year FO pay, and pay back any loans you've acquired to finance your flight training, living expenses, pay your car note, and the training contract?
Skywest hires a lot of Mesa pilots, so you wouldn't be doing anything different if you came here, but I don't think it's worth it to time build here.
A lot of pilots are doing exactly what you're proposing. If you look at Mesa's seniority list (1600-1700 pilots) - the bottom 1000 pilots have less than 3 years seniority with Mesa. the bottom 700 pilots have less than 2 years seniority with Mesa. They leave for ExpressJet, Skywest, and Republic.
By going to Mesa, you're not helping things at Mesa - JO never has to pay FO's any more than $23/hr because his FO's are always 1st year FOs.
What is happening at Mesa during your 1 year here:
- continued pilot attrition - pilots making lateral moves (what you are contemplating)
- contract negotations
- Mesa moving the 50-seat jets out of the US and into China.
What does that mean to you?
Despite the high pilot attrition Mesa has right now, Mesa really has about 1000 surplus pilots. Every newhire Mesa gets are additional surplus pilots. As Mesa moves its 50-seat jets to China, I think Mesa will go from 200 CRJs/ERJs/1900s to 50 CRJ-900s and 30 CRJ-700s over the next few years.
Mesa doesn't have enough pilots to staff its current flying, but Mesa DOES have the staffing to fly the 80 remaining jets for at least two to three years with the current attrition rate offset by new hiring.
As Mesa moves it's CRJs to China, the amount of flying left for the pilots at Mesa will decrease as the jets leave. Although the jets are leaving for China, I don't think there will be any Mesa pilots flying in China. The pilots left will be spending a lot of time on reserve or ready reserve - not being utilized and not flying.
Mesa has no incentive to negotiate a new pilot contract and there are no more programmed pay raises in the contract after Sep 2007 - so while pilots are under pressure to negotiate a new contract, Mesa does not. The pilots think they have leverage with the attrition rate and Mesa not being able to staff current flying - but in reality they don't.
Mesa's CEO is all about making money - if he can make money without pilots he'll do it and this China thing is all about making money without the pilots.
So after this long post, in short - if you want to work here, work here, but don't time build here at Mesa.