Woooooow that E175 upgrade time dropped
#41
Woooooow that E175 upgrade time dropped
I’m all for it, I’ve followed XJT for a while and as a newbie I’ll support the MEC. Most of what I was told by the recruiters a few months ago hasn’t panned out.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
#42
Banned
Joined APC: Oct 2017
Posts: 848
#44
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Feb 2008
Position: It's a plane and it's a seat
Posts: 951
Now I am not saying accept crap pay/work rules but be conscious of how much you push the envelope. Yes the new mgmt team at Xjet hasn’t held up their end of the bargain. The union should went for more binding language to force them to negotiate
#45
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Jan 2018
Posts: 119
Like PH stated F9 sells their owns tickets, what does Xjet sell? I will tell you what they sell... nothing. Regionals are staffing agencies/subcontractors. Become to expensive/want to much and someone else will do your job for a little less and a quicker upgrade.
Now I am not saying accept crap pay/work rules but be conscious of how much you push the envelope. Yes the new mgmt team at Xjet hasn’t held up their end of the bargain. The union should went for more binding language to force them to negotiate
Now I am not saying accept crap pay/work rules but be conscious of how much you push the envelope. Yes the new mgmt team at Xjet hasn’t held up their end of the bargain. The union should went for more binding language to force them to negotiate
#46
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Nov 2005
Posts: 242
Fair enough. So help us all understand.
How does this strategy of less pilots and worse performance convince United to give us more flying?
Are we missing the goal?
Is the local Alpa leadership simply waiting for XJT to go out of business?
A lot of us aren’t seeing path to success following the current course.
Please show or tell us how we win by following the MEC blindly down this path?
How does this strategy of less pilots and worse performance convince United to give us more flying?
Are we missing the goal?
Is the local Alpa leadership simply waiting for XJT to go out of business?
A lot of us aren’t seeing path to success following the current course.
Please show or tell us how we win by following the MEC blindly down this path?
Management does management stuff. You know, like keeping their employees happy with good pay and benefits. Management is responsible for growth, not pilots.
Pretty simple really. All of you rocket surgeons who think pilots are responsible for growth think too highly of yourselves.
#47
Line Holder
Joined APC: Aug 2019
Posts: 83
It's that of the employees that are required to get a plane off the ground, we are probably the longest lead time to get qualified and I'm certain it's the most expensive. (Be interesting to show cost of training/return on investment for the following four fields.)
Considering the above list of FA, mech, dispatch, pilot.
So, you have to have a steady pipeline with a long lead time and it's expensive and the training is paid for by the employee up to the time of hiring.
Dispatch: 2 week course.
FA: 6 weeks? (Don't recall.)
Mechanic: 24-30 months, can be done 100% as apprentice program I believe?
Pilot: 2 years min (1250 hrs/Associates. Aside from military but the only ones we could get inside of 10 years is Guard/Reserve. A limited supply.)
It's not ego I don't think. State another employee type that takes more time/money to train.
#48
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Aug 2010
Posts: 200
The company announced 30 open positions for CA then awarded 85!!
- sign of more planes? Why do we now have 225 ER7 CAs? 225/5= 45. That’s right, with this bid we are now preparing to staff 20 additional airframes. This is basically the big announcement!!
- no backfill was awarded with this bid. The company is now in the position of having to put out a 19-06 bid ASAP. 19-05 created around 80 CA vacancies. Combined with the vacancies due to attrition there should be well over 100 ERJ CA vacancies.
- with this many openings, the next CA awards will drop very close to the 18 month/1000 hr mark.
- while your buddies are still on reserve at SKW or END, you will be close to CA upgrade at XJT!!
- sign of more planes? Why do we now have 225 ER7 CAs? 225/5= 45. That’s right, with this bid we are now preparing to staff 20 additional airframes. This is basically the big announcement!!
- no backfill was awarded with this bid. The company is now in the position of having to put out a 19-06 bid ASAP. 19-05 created around 80 CA vacancies. Combined with the vacancies due to attrition there should be well over 100 ERJ CA vacancies.
- with this many openings, the next CA awards will drop very close to the 18 month/1000 hr mark.
- while your buddies are still on reserve at SKW or END, you will be close to CA upgrade at XJT!!
701EV
Last edited by 701EV; 09-22-2019 at 08:31 PM.
#49
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Sep 2019
Posts: 429
#50
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Nov 2005
Posts: 242
It's not that.
It's that of the employees that are required to get a plane off the ground, we are probably the longest lead time to get qualified and I'm certain it's the most expensive. (Be interesting to show cost of training/return on investment for the following four fields.)
Considering the above list of FA, mech, dispatch, pilot.
So, you have to have a steady pipeline with a long lead time and it's expensive and the training is paid for by the employee up to the time of hiring.
Dispatch: 2 week course.
FA: 6 weeks? (Don't recall.)
Mechanic: 24-30 months, can be done 100% as apprentice program I believe?
Pilot: 2 years min (1250 hrs/Associates. Aside from military but the only ones we could get inside of 10 years is Guard/Reserve. A limited supply.)
It's not ego I don't think. State another employee type that takes more time/money to train.
It's that of the employees that are required to get a plane off the ground, we are probably the longest lead time to get qualified and I'm certain it's the most expensive. (Be interesting to show cost of training/return on investment for the following four fields.)
Considering the above list of FA, mech, dispatch, pilot.
So, you have to have a steady pipeline with a long lead time and it's expensive and the training is paid for by the employee up to the time of hiring.
Dispatch: 2 week course.
FA: 6 weeks? (Don't recall.)
Mechanic: 24-30 months, can be done 100% as apprentice program I believe?
Pilot: 2 years min (1250 hrs/Associates. Aside from military but the only ones we could get inside of 10 years is Guard/Reserve. A limited supply.)
It's not ego I don't think. State another employee type that takes more time/money to train.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post