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Old 09-16-2011 | 08:08 AM
  #21  
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Originally Posted by chazbird
Median income in the US is $49,000 and falling. Most pilot bases are in higher cost cities. Most regional pilots have a 4 year degree + specialized training + travel away from home = should be making more than median income.

I am not overly romantic about 80's regional life, it was a stepping stone then, instead of climbing Mt. Everest now. I did, however, although I did make an inflation corrected (1987 to 2011) 42k as a first year FO on a SAAB, 15 on/off and it had a FO, although I am not sure what means. By the 90's it was well on its way to the bottom, the code shares and eventual buyouts of the mid 80's is what eventually sent it all down hill, although with expanded flying. There used to be many independent regionals with their own routes, some were horrible, some were really quite good. True, it did take 2500/500 and (sometimes) an ATP to get in, and you had to mail a resume/application, which I think is a better way - the internet has lead to a huge flood of resumes. A certain fractional I know has 14,000 pilot resumes on file, all internet. They are obviously overwhelmed and now they only hire through pilot referrals, ultimately not a good thing because like any organic system that is a way to inbreed and get a disease. In ancient days I'd research a company at the library, I think it kept 14,000 resumes from showing up.
Your $49,000 figure for median is HOUSEHOLD median income. Take a 35,000 - 40,000 regional pilot married to a 20,000 per year taco bell cashier and they are making way above median household income. As far as "degree, specialized training, away from home, blah blah blah" now are you are just talking entitlements. Do your homework people and if you don't like the water then don't jump in. Quit if you don't like it and get over yourselves. If you think $35K-$45K per year jobs are a dime a dozen in the real world than you are really in need of a reality check.
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Old 09-16-2011 | 08:14 AM
  #22  
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The problem most of us have is that this is the only career we know, so how else do we compare what is 'good pay' other than the next company is paying more for a bigger plane?

Short story...dad was Air Force pilot in the 70s and didn't get on board when the airlines were making their Vietnam era hiring dash. So, he went to work at IBM. Late 80s come around, and he had been there 10 years, but UA was hiring again. Tossed in his application, and the letter came back extending him an interview.

The pay was about 40% what he was making at IBM, not to mention I was about 3 at the time. Instead of going airline, he stayed put and got a very nice pension when he retired back in 2003 at the age of 56. Name me an airline that offers/offered this.

Its the same old song and dance. Until pilots understand their true worth, we will settle for what is on the table because hey, its more than the last job or what the other outfit is offering.
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Old 09-16-2011 | 08:23 AM
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Not true... I flew the metro in the 80's and never had to pay anyone $10,000.00 ! Also made much more than $12 an hour to fly it. Not really sure where this guy supposedly went for such a bad deal?
Nice job Paid2fly! A close friend had to pony up that fee when he was hired at CoEx around 98-99, one of the last generations to come through who did. And ACA was still charging the 10G fee into that period too. I know many pilots who’s deciding factor for a job was that fee, and American Eagle, TranStates, and Mesa were some of the operators who didn’t charge it.

And the pay rate quote isn't rumor either, I’m sure there’s somebody on this forum who could supply the pay rates for many of the probably now defunct, regionals, or “commuters”.

Anyway, a realization while thinking about the differences between then and now was that back then the cost of getting into professinal flying was much lower, but you paid your dues in the amount of time it took. Now it’s exactly the opposite. The Time it takes to become a Barbie jet FO replete with a jaunty walk, ear buds, frosted tips and a backpack is relatively short, but the cost is exorbitant.
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Old 09-16-2011 | 08:43 AM
  #24  
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Your $49,000 figure for median is HOUSEHOLD median income. Take a 35,000 - 40,000 regional pilot married to a 20,000 per year taco bell cashier and they are making way above median household income. As far as "degree, specialized training, away from home, blah blah blah" now are you are just talking entitlements. Do your homework people and if you don't like the water then don't jump in. Quit if you don't like it and get over yourselves. If you think $35K-$45K per year jobs are a dime a dozen in the real world than you are really in need of a reality check.
This is a point that I’ve made many times. A furloughed friend was desperate for a job as time went by. His wife had a great job, so at first life was ok, then she was downsized and now it’s panic button time. Factor in kids established with school, friends/family in your city and the cost of moving, or unable to move because your house is underwater and you may not be able to cover the mortgage and expenses with a remotely rented house and you got yourself a real pickle. Find a job quickly making more than $12 bucks an hour which after overtime, if offered anymore, is about 24K-28K a year. My boy is a college educated, well presented professional and couldn’t land a job to save his life. Everywhere he applied, there were 200 other applicants with specific experience in that job. Luckily he landed on his feet at an LCC but there were some dark lonely nights until that bolt of lighting struck.

I am not defending our pay. I’m offering a short story to illustrate the disconnect that begins to creep in as we compare ourselves to the Southwest and FedEx FO pulling that mythical obscene old school wage. And then there is pilot who references the college buddy or in-law who works in that one industry at ABC Corp and is making 6 figures that continues to perpetuate the feeling that everyone outside our biz is printing money, with weekends and holidays off and assistant coaching their kids soccer teams. It’s not happening. Do they exist, sure, but they are the exception and not the norm.
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Old 09-16-2011 | 08:49 AM
  #25  
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Thanks for the correction, median household income is $49,000. However I still stand by the degree + training + time away formula. A family making 49,000K in any major metro area in this country is hurting, as real wages have stagnated since 1970. It isn't just the airline "entitled" types who are falling behind. I am one of the "entitled" baby boomer's, although I don't think I am. Flew bush, freight, regional, start-up, overseas contract and am flat on my ass 12.5 years from mandatory retirement. It is a pity there's all the back biting, being labeled entitled by a mainline pilot and being called a seat hog by the younger generation because of the age 65 year rule. It seems the way things are going by the time the 26 year olds ****ed at the old farts come up to age 65 they'll be wishing it'll be extended to 70.

I knew Metro captains in 1983 making 50K, that's 1983, an independent company with no interline/code share. I also knew FO's in 99's or f27's making 12k.
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Old 09-16-2011 | 09:19 AM
  #26  
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I don't think any regional FO should make less than 25K first year.

What we pilots need to do is to look at other careers and fight for pay thats comparable.

Will that happen? Nope.

Am I optimistic that this career is going anywhere? Nope.

Am I mad?



Side note: My GF (hot Italian girl, 22 years old, in school currently so no degree etc) works for Gulfstream (no, not the airline...the manufacturer) as a receptionist....making...wait for it....36K She started a month ago.

...and the benefits are insane...

Her gym membership is free (I still pay 50 a month to be this aesthetic)

She has PET INSURANCE....you heard it....PET insurance

Cell phone is paid for (company pays the bill)

Better hotel rates, rental car rates, escort rates etc.





I'm STILL not even mad....just....



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Old 09-16-2011 | 09:26 AM
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Saluki,

I'm sure you're athletic membership contributes mightily to your aesthetic.

-couldn’t resist, kidding of course.

And now back to the thread…
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Old 09-16-2011 | 09:27 AM
  #28  
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Originally Posted by OCCP
$40k is still underpaid. I'm actually on 6th year rj fo pay...and it is still less than 40k, not by much but still less. I find it stupid how all the mainline pilots come on the regional threads and say things like "quit crying, leave of you don't like it". You're not the one having to do these jobs. If you big bad mainline pilots would stop giving away your scope, and flying till 65, we would not be having this conversation.
Wow. We have forced labor here in the land of the free? The only reason why regional pay is so low is because people continue to sign up for these jobs. These pay scales are public. This is not a surprise for a new-hire opening their first pay stub.

I used to fly for a night freight company that could always attract pilots, because of decent pay and lifestyle (if you don't mind red-eyes) and eventual upgrade to the jets. Then came the dawn of the RJ, and suddenly box-hauling wasn't as glamorous as going straight into the right seat of that shiny new RJ, even though that 50-seat RJ didn't pay a dime more than the smaller turboprop commuters that were being replaced. My company suddenly had a hard time filling new-hire classes. What happened? Did the mail stop moving? No, just as suddenly new-hire pay increased by 25%, plus a signing bonus and another bonus at your first anniversery. I'd already been there a few years, but my pay went up too, thanks to the sudden shortage of qualified applicants (Part 135, so 1200 hour minimum).

The young guys like to blame the boomer generation's selfishness for their misery (I'm not in either generation, I guess?), but what are the chances that the young guys will suddenly quit signing up for the poverty-level RJ jobs? (hint: probably about zero)
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Old 09-16-2011 | 09:39 AM
  #29  
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Originally Posted by OCCP
$40k is still underpaid. I'm actually on 6th year rj fo pay...and it is still less than 40k, not by much but still less. I find it stupid how all the mainline pilots come on the regional threads and say things like "quit crying, leave of you don't like it". You're not the one having to do these jobs. If you big bad mainline pilots would stop giving away your scope, and flying till 65, we would not be having this conversation.

You're right. That would make room for the military pilots, who should start out at the majors, spots at the majors.
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Old 09-16-2011 | 09:42 AM
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You regional guys are missing the point. You guys get a fair wage for the minimal training and experience you bring to the job. Regional F/O is an entry level position.
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