Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
Line Holder
Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 1,142
Likes: 5
I'm a LCA and have never had anyone ask me to encourage senior FOs to upgrade. I even called my chief to see if I'm missing something, nope. No one, in management, is doing that. Might there be a few individual LCAs telling guys to upgrade, sure.
You are kidding yourself that there is a crisis of leadership. Almost without fail the guys who do well in captain upgrade are the junior guys who bid it early. The ones who struggle are the long term wide body FOs who spent the last ten years worried about fish or steak for dinner and paid zero attention to how the captain was running the flight deck. Let them go back to the right seat of a wide body. The younger guys do just fine.
You are kidding yourself that there is a crisis of leadership. Almost without fail the guys who do well in captain upgrade are the junior guys who bid it early. The ones who struggle are the long term wide body FOs who spent the last ten years worried about fish or steak for dinner and paid zero attention to how the captain was running the flight deck. Let them go back to the right seat of a wide body. The younger guys do just fine.
I agree. Every single FO from a new hire to a 777 FO is qualified to be captain. I hear guys all the time say we cant have new hires going to the captain seat on the E-190. I always think that is funny because most are probably coming to Delta from a captain seat. I am a senior FO, and have flown with very junior captains. Across the board they did a great job.
Very true. Many many new hires over the past few years came in with a PIC type on the 170/190 w/ many years as LCA/ Sim Instructor/ PIC/ SIC, etc... Compass, Republic, JetBlue...
Let me clarify. First, Xray, sorry if I was a bit harsh. I do appreciate you posting on here as a LCA and making a call, etc... I'm just repeating what I've heard in the widebody community and from some mgmt types.
And to be clear, I'm NOT saying anything bad about JR. Captains. Or anyone. Only that some do regret the lifestyle they've signed up for. It's changed from what it was. The crisis part refers to the future. The retirements are accelerating and the ranks of LCAs and the like will decrease. The E190 situation is the first time that we could see a cockpit crew with less than a year experience at Delta between them. There's no guarantee that former E175 LCAs will be the ones in the left seat. The widebody FO campers are the ones who need to be enticed to choose a career path that benefits not only themselves but the company.
And to be clear, I'm NOT saying anything bad about JR. Captains. Or anyone. Only that some do regret the lifestyle they've signed up for. It's changed from what it was. The crisis part refers to the future. The retirements are accelerating and the ranks of LCAs and the like will decrease. The E190 situation is the first time that we could see a cockpit crew with less than a year experience at Delta between them. There's no guarantee that former E175 LCAs will be the ones in the left seat. The widebody FO campers are the ones who need to be enticed to choose a career path that benefits not only themselves but the company.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 857
Likes: 0
From: Representing the REAL Delta
I agree. Every single FO from a new hire to a 777 FO is qualified to be captain. I hear guys all the time say we cant have new hires going to the captain seat on the E-190. I always think that is funny because most are probably coming to Delta from a captain seat. I am a senior FO, and have flown with very junior captains. Across the board they did a great job.
Line Holder
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,353
Likes: 54
From: 765A
Let me clarify. First, Xray, sorry if I was a bit harsh. I do appreciate you posting on here as a LCA and making a call, etc... I'm just repeating what I've heard in the widebody community and from some mgmt types.
And to be clear, I'm NOT saying anything bad about JR. Captains. Or anyone. Only that some do regret the lifestyle they've signed up for. It's changed from what it was. The crisis part refers to the future. The retirements are accelerating and the ranks of LCAs and the like will decrease. The E190 situation is the first time that we could see a cockpit crew with less than a year experience at Delta between them. There's no guarantee that former E175 LCAs will be the ones in the left seat. The widebody FO campers are the ones who need to be enticed to choose a career path that benefits not only themselves but the company.
And to be clear, I'm NOT saying anything bad about JR. Captains. Or anyone. Only that some do regret the lifestyle they've signed up for. It's changed from what it was. The crisis part refers to the future. The retirements are accelerating and the ranks of LCAs and the like will decrease. The E190 situation is the first time that we could see a cockpit crew with less than a year experience at Delta between them. There's no guarantee that former E175 LCAs will be the ones in the left seat. The widebody FO campers are the ones who need to be enticed to choose a career path that benefits not only themselves but the company.
We heard the same thing back in '07. "We can't have newhires going straight into the right seat of the ER. That would be madness." Meanwhile ACMI outfits had been doing this for decades.
Remember all the incidents we had in '08 when new hires went straight to the ER? Yeah. Me neither.
Moderator
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 7,263
Likes: 105
From: DAL 330
I'm a LCA and have never had anyone ask me to encourage senior FOs to upgrade. I even called my chief to see if I'm missing something, nope. No one, in management, is doing that. Might there be a few individual LCAs telling guys to upgrade, sure.
You are kidding yourself that there is a crisis of leadership. Almost without fail the guys who do well in captain upgrade are the junior guys who bid it early. The ones who struggle are the long term wide body FOs who spent the last ten years worried about fish or steak for dinner and paid zero attention to how the captain was running the flight deck. Let them go back to the right seat of a wide body. The younger guys do just fine.
You are kidding yourself that there is a crisis of leadership. Almost without fail the guys who do well in captain upgrade are the junior guys who bid it early. The ones who struggle are the long term wide body FOs who spent the last ten years worried about fish or steak for dinner and paid zero attention to how the captain was running the flight deck. Let them go back to the right seat of a wide body. The younger guys do just fine.
Xray,
I basically agree with what you are saying but you are greatly simplifying the issue. Many Seniors FOs did not have the quick upgrade opportunity due to 9-11, outsourcing and age 65. Now things are changing, but many are enjoying the very high QOL that summer vacations, weekends off, LCA drops, and the GS opportunities that often become available to senior FOs.
IMHO - If guys want to upgrade quickly - great for them, anyone hired by DAL should do great. If guys want to camp out in the right seat - great for them, more opportunity for other guys to upgrade quickly.
One of the best things about this job is that "One mans trash is another mans gold."
Scoop
That's not true (I don't think). You only get paid straight pay for the trip you work plus straight pay for the dropped trip. That's why there isn't a white slip with conflict. It would be the same thing.
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