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Old 08-01-2014 | 11:27 AM
  #25  
Kprc1
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Originally Posted by CBreezy
First, a regional isn't a "starting point." It's typically the 3rd step for most people. Your analogy would be more appropriate if you looked at flight instructing or aerial survey as washing dishes and waiting tables. A first officer at an airline is an assistant manager of his airplane full of 70-80 people. The next step is manager.

Flight instructing, aerial mapping, jumper dumper, or any other part 91 flying is time building. After these 91 jobs not all go to a Regional. There are many good paying 135 jobs out there cargo and corporate.

If you want to believe first year pay is a "right of passage," you need to wake up to the realities of this industry. There are literally thousands of pilots who've had to do first year pay twice or even three times. When Comair folded, there were former 20 year CRJ-900 Captains flying the same aircraft, literally, for "intern" wages.

What if you never upgrade? What if you wake up one day and your company has started to downsize. It's 10 years later and you're still making less than 40k a year. It is easier to accept low wages when the future of high wages look so close and promising. Point being, there may be people reading this right now who will never see the left seat and your idea of intern wages hurts them most.
You make really good points. I never thought about the pilots who were already established in a career with a regional only to be furloughed or even let go due to company closing.
Flight instructing, aerial mapping, jumper dumper, or any other part 91 flying is time building. After these 91 jobs not all go to a Regional. There are many good paying 135 jobs out there cargo and corporate.

You never answered the questions. You only responded in general.
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