trafficinsight
Well-Known Member
As @trafficinsight puts it, "Regulate thyself, or you shall be regulated upon."
Red rules, green rules, and brown rules.
As @trafficinsight puts it, "Regulate thyself, or you shall be regulated upon."
Brown rules, or "Crew Support will not expect a call back between 0600 and 0615."Red rules, green rules, and brown rules.
Only idiot pilots who "love" flying are willing to make such silly excuses for undercutting themselves.
I don't know where this silly idea comes from that pilots should subsidize start-up airlines from their own pockets. I own a small company that has only been in business for 6 years, but I can't pay 70% of what my competition pays just because they're 10 times our size and have been around since the '80s. Labor costs what labor costs. Only idiot pilots who "love" flying are willing to make such silly excuses for undercutting themselves.
I know you've moved way, way past this now, but that is kind of ironic coming from somebody who has your history.
ATN, you don't own an airline. You can't just use some other business and make the same correlation for an airline.
And I don't know when Airtran pilots get Southwest pay, but currently:
http://www.airlinepilotcentral.com/airlines/major-national-lcc/airtran_airways
You mean like Airtran when it was Valujet? Pilots had to buy their own training types to work there. Oh wait so does SWA. That whole subsidizing the airline thing. But supposedly that's okay because SWA pilot are now the highest paid 737 pilots in the country.
Of course I can. If a company can't compete by paying market wages, then that company doesn't deserve to be in business.
Yes, I agree. But the previous point still stands, wouldn't you agree? That in the Part 121 passenger airline business in the United States, we have three different tiers. Each tier has its own set of market average rates.
What's the current AirTran 1st, 2nd, and 3rd year FO payrates? Just curious.
Of course I don't agree. That's absurd. It's something you've pulled out of your ass to justify the unjustifiable.
If you can't understand why an ERJ commands a different pay rate than a 737-800, then you aren't just a punk, you're functionally retarded.
USMCmech said:I don't.
As a pilot you are doing the same work in an ERJ as you are in a domestic widebody. I still don't see why we accept different pay rates for domestic ops. How many paying bodies management can stuff in the cabin is irrelevant to me. I know, I know, many moons ago long befrore anyone here was even born the pilot unions conected pilot pay rates to aircraft size when they got those new big DC-3s, but it's a stupid idea.
It's a very simple concept, really. The bigger the airplane, the more responsibility you have and the more revenue that you produce. Pretty much every industry pays more for more responsibility or more revenue produced. Ours is no different.
kellwolf said:I hear this, but the math doesn't work. For example, a five year Delta 717 guy gets paid $1.04 per seat, but a five year Delta 777 guy gets paid $0.60 per seat. On the flip side, some regional ops get paid more per seat than a narrowbody major. If it were really as simple as you said, the Delta 777 guy should be getting paid somewhere in the $250/hr range rather than the $160/hr range.
Do you agree that there should be a hard floor in which certain contracts should abide by? I don't necessarily disagree with you that the larger the airplane the greater risk. I do however see that we all have to abide by the same rules a regulations and for that I think there should be a hard floor in which we should base all of our contracts. I think it is horrible that even within ALPA we have guys who fly the same airplanes to the same places and get different pay. Now that being said I'm not talking about the delta's and the united's. How many CRJ operators are there out there that do the same job yet continue to undercut one another with the approval of our union leadership? These are the things that make me mad with our association.Nobody said it was a linear scale. In any field. But more responsibility still equals more conpensation.
Do you agree that there should be a hard floor in which certain contracts should abide by?