You can have it!
#11
JDMJ's evidently not speaking of the big picture. The regional industry, and more importantly the industry as a whole, is hugely different now. The rapid movement and eventual brass rings for those who paid a few dues are largely a thing of the past. Yeah, mgmt will always try to nickel and dime, that song remains the same. That's their job after all; but the career path and resultant wealth accumulation of the typical pilot (not all, mind you) has taken a dramatic turn for the worse.
#12
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 3,045
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From: FO
Just don't come on here and ***** if you go overseas and see your kid 5 days a month.
#13
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Joined: Jan 2008
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#14
Are we there yet??!!
Joined: Apr 2006
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Things now are much different at the commuters. For one the introduction of the regional jet and two the mass proliferation of said jet at the commuter level. The commuters have grown more than 3x their orginial size and more commuters that did not exsist before have come into the biz. Since there has been a mass transfer of flying to the commuter level, the stepping stone that the commuters once was to the majors has been dramatically slowed down and in some cases even halted. In '95 you could not get a job much less an interview with 500 hrs, to be competetive is was more like 2000 hrs.
So explain to me how its the same other than working at the commuter level sucks.
#15
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Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 4,772
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From: 744 CA
I think what he meant was that the regional end of things SUCKED... when I started at a regional carrier in 1992 it sucked.... pay sucked... work rules sucked... oh yea.. and there was little or no movement then either ... i spent 3 years on the bottom of a 1000 person seniority list ..with chance to upgrade...
The regional side of things has seen pockets of good times with fast upgrades and lots of movement... but that has not been the norm.
Oh... and in 1992 when I went to work for Flaghship Airlines ( AE )...I had 1600 hours nearly all ME turbine time...... and I was the LOW man in a class of 18. The more it changes the more it stays the same....
The regional side of things has seen pockets of good times with fast upgrades and lots of movement... but that has not been the norm.
Oh... and in 1992 when I went to work for Flaghship Airlines ( AE )...I had 1600 hours nearly all ME turbine time...... and I was the LOW man in a class of 18. The more it changes the more it stays the same....
#16
Thread Starter
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Joined: Nov 2006
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From: Out
#17
Thread Starter
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Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 448
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From: Out
#18
I think what he meant was that the regional end of things SUCKED... when I started at a regional carrier in 1992 it sucked.... pay sucked... work rules sucked... oh yea.. and there was little or no movement then either ... i spent 3 years on the bottom of a 1000 person seniority list ..with chance to upgrade...
The regional side of things has seen pockets of good times with fast upgrades and lots of movement... but that has not been the norm.
Oh... and in 1992 when I went to work for Flaghship Airlines ( AE )...I had 1600 hours nearly all ME turbine time...... and I was the LOW man in a class of 18. The more it changes the more it stays the same....
The regional side of things has seen pockets of good times with fast upgrades and lots of movement... but that has not been the norm.
Oh... and in 1992 when I went to work for Flaghship Airlines ( AE )...I had 1600 hours nearly all ME turbine time...... and I was the LOW man in a class of 18. The more it changes the more it stays the same....
If anything, I guess most of you are right. It's not the same. The guys entering the industry 2002-2007 had it easier. Straight out of flight school into the right seat of an RJ. Wild growth and SJS. Now that it's time to pay the piper for that growth with contraction, its no longer all fun and games.
Sorry, I guess I have no charity for anyone who enters this profession without understanding that the music was starting to stop and that bad times were coming. Now they're here and the regional guys are going to be in the same turd pile that the legacy guys had to endure 2001-2006. But it will change. The industry will evolve and continue on. The pay will still suck, there will still be whipsawing, and management will still continue to BOHICA the employees, and 10-12 years from now the regionals will be right back in the same state as they are today. Unless cabotage is approved, then we are all hosed.



, for better or for worse I have so much respect for us, what we do/who we are, we are one of a kind 
