When to take long term Mil leave
#61
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Apr 2015
Posts: 339
What does the training float at AA look like with 20% of the pilots coming and going out of currency? Returning to the school house when their seniority can hold another type only to bounce out again on leave so they don't have to sit reserve on it? How many more people does AA have to interview and employ as a result? Not just on the line, in the training center, HR, payroll, you name it.
The 'company' aka flight ops management doesn't have a problem with it because they come from the same background and view this as a flying club.
They never feel the heat of our shoddy financial performance until it comes time to hand out furlough notices, and even then the status quo is untouchable.
As a whole this is the systematic attitude problem that plagues this airline and sets it apart from companies like Southwest/Delta.
The 'company' aka flight ops management doesn't have a problem with it because they come from the same background and view this as a flying club.
They never feel the heat of our shoddy financial performance until it comes time to hand out furlough notices, and even then the status quo is untouchable.
As a whole this is the systematic attitude problem that plagues this airline and sets it apart from companies like Southwest/Delta.
#62
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Mar 2014
Posts: 3,091
What does the training float at AA look like with 20% of the pilots coming and going out of currency? Returning to the school house when their seniority can hold another type only to bounce out again on leave so they don't have to sit reserve on it? How many more people does AA have to interview and employ as a result? Not just on the line, in the training center, HR, payroll, you name it.
The 'company' aka flight ops management doesn't have a problem with it because they come from the same background and view this as a flying club.
They never feel the heat of our shoddy financial performance until it comes time to hand out furlough notices, and even then the status quo is untouchable.
As a whole this is the systematic attitude problem that plagues this airline and sets it apart from companies like Southwest/Delta.
The 'company' aka flight ops management doesn't have a problem with it because they come from the same background and view this as a flying club.
They never feel the heat of our shoddy financial performance until it comes time to hand out furlough notices, and even then the status quo is untouchable.
As a whole this is the systematic attitude problem that plagues this airline and sets it apart from companies like Southwest/Delta.
The mil guys I flew with were all done with that lifestyle. They wanted to fly at AA full time. But they were also older. So I don't really have a gauge on how many do this and if it's a normal practice and how much it impacts us.
#63
#64
Also new guys to the reserves (fresh off Active Duty) still have a lot of mission hacker left in them. Takes some time to sort it all out and get things balanced.
#65
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Dec 2015
Posts: 297
#66
Line Holder
Joined APC: Jul 2018
Posts: 34
What does the training float at AA look like with 20% of the pilots coming and going out of currency? Returning to the school house when their seniority can hold another type only to bounce out again on leave so they don't have to sit reserve on it? How many more people does AA have to interview and employ as a result? Not just on the line, in the training center, HR, payroll, you name it.
The 'company' aka flight ops management doesn't have a problem with it because they come from the same background and view this as a flying club.
They never feel the heat of our shoddy financial performance until it comes time to hand out furlough notices, and even then the status quo is untouchable.
As a whole this is the systematic attitude problem that plagues this airline and sets it apart from companies like Southwest/Delta.
The 'company' aka flight ops management doesn't have a problem with it because they come from the same background and view this as a flying club.
They never feel the heat of our shoddy financial performance until it comes time to hand out furlough notices, and even then the status quo is untouchable.
As a whole this is the systematic attitude problem that plagues this airline and sets it apart from companies like Southwest/Delta.
Love the “I hate American” rhetoric and every problem here doesn’t exist and good ol’ Delta. You really think our number of military guys and gals who take long term leave is worse than Delta and SWA? Where do you get that data from? I can tell you from the 3 squadrons I have been a part of the exact numbers on long term mil leave.
AA - 5
Delta - 10 (granted one of those squadrons was near Atl)
United - 4
SWA - 5
Not saying we are the best or worst at it but don’t claim every other airline does it better without data. Definitely a few bad apples from the mil who take advantage of the legal loophole. The majority didn’t plan on taking long term when they left and did so because their unit needed them to and someone has to fill those full time spots. Since most guard and reserve pilots are airlines pilots, those full time slots will inevitably be filled by mostly airline guys.
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#67
SWA also forcibly pairs military pilots with prior 121 hires because they know how to fly planes but aren’t familiar with 121 ops.
The vast majority of TWA's demise was Carl Icahn. AA isn't a government agency; it can run out of money, it can go bankrupt, everyone can lose their jobs, we must turn a profit to exist. A few of us have fairly vivid experiences of bankruptcies turning careers sour. If you want to flagrantly jeopardize that for your own selfish benefit then yes, you're putting everyone at risk.
The vast majority of TWA's demise was Carl Icahn. AA isn't a government agency; it can run out of money, it can go bankrupt, everyone can lose their jobs, we must turn a profit to exist. A few of us have fairly vivid experiences of bankruptcies turning careers sour. If you want to flagrantly jeopardize that for your own selfish benefit then yes, you're putting everyone at risk.
You spelled “because they know how to fly planes but aren’t familiar with 121 ops“ and “Carl Icahn” wrong in the above paragraphs so I fixed it for you.
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#68
They are "crapping" on everyone, regardless of background who actually intends to work for the job they applied for. Embedded military management has a soft spot for and preferential hiring for military pilots(50%!). Every other applicant, again, regardless of background, may be being overlooked to hire a pilot who has little to no intention of working for AA until they receive their military retirement. I get it, it's legal, you're my hero and "protected." Simply calling the practice OUT.
Were you too young to serve in the Armed Forces in the years after 9/11? Because, you know, you coulda had a win/win-type deal happening if you were a trained pilot anywhere in that timeframe. You could serve your country AND be able to “crap on” all kinds of “bros” going on long-term mil while at the same time doing absolutely nothing just “sitting at the squadron.” The world was your oyster and you blew it I suppose. I admit it’s hard to resist the glitz of the regionals, plus you would’ve had “no idea what you were doing” when you got to AA, so that would’ve been a bummer.
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#70
Southwest tends to be the most friendly of people exploring the MLOA envelope (if I may use a euphemism), based on my anecdotal experience in my last two squadrons. Other than that I would agree, I don't see AA differing too wildly from the mean across part 121 when it comes to junior folks exploiting the benefits of USERRA in airline employment.
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