How long is a regional pilots career?
#31
You've never been in charge of, or sat as part of, a hiring board or some type of selection board have you? No one said that it guaranteed a job, but it is foolish to not realize the mandated requirements or incentives.USMCFLYR
#32
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 108
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The only problem with corporate is if it's a company or individual that falls on hard times financially (or dies), the planes are the first things to go.
Some of the biggest and most stable companies have closed their flight departments overnight.
The best gig I heard of was a guaranteed job for life by a single Owner and a $5 MM life insurance policy on the Owner naming the pilot as the benefactor. Single pilot King Air 200, living in Idaho and making six figures.
I'd walk out on 20+ years of seniority at any airline for that kind of job.
#33
#34
#35
I cannot believe this: you and I actually agree on something!
#36
#37
#38
At first I wasn't gonna post anything in response to the aforementioned post. Then, I thought...information is the key. Just like USMCFLYR said...mandates! Is it fair or is there a level playing field out there? I dunno; but I think the numbers speak for themselves.
atp
#39
The percentages of blacks and other minorities among U.S. pilots are so low it's hard to find meaningful statistics. A 1997 National Academies report, "Taking Flight: Education and Training for Aviation Careers" found 92 percent of U.S. airline pilots in 1990 were white men, compared with 43 percent in the civilian labor force. Less than 2 percent were black and less than 3 percent hispanic.
At first I wasn't gonna post anything in response to the aforementioned post. Then, I thought...information is the key. Just like USMCFLYR said...mandates! Is it fair or is there a level playing field out there? I dunno; but I think the numbers speak for themselves.
atp
At first I wasn't gonna post anything in response to the aforementioned post. Then, I thought...information is the key. Just like USMCFLYR said...mandates! Is it fair or is there a level playing field out there? I dunno; but I think the numbers speak for themselves.
atp
#40
If it had been conducted in 1890, it would have been quite prescient, HMP. There are many reasons for low numbers of Black, Hispanic and women in professional aviation, discrimination is probably down around number 8 or 9 as a reason. Lack of role models, education, desire to undertake the difficult training, lack of transferability of skills learned, tough stand on criminal/drug records, a feeling of being an "outsider", acting "white male" are just some of the reasons. The US Military is probably the most colorblind large organization in America, the rates of minorities and women are nearly identical as in civil aviation. The Army has a higher rate than the USAF.
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