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-   -   sponsorship (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/regional/79796-sponsorship.html)

Mike400 02-12-2014 08:47 AM

sponsorship
 
Does anyone think we'll eventually see the regionals sponsoring training in return for a longer signed commitment to fly for them? And I'm not talking about a pay to play situation.

FaceBiter 02-12-2014 08:55 AM

No..

(filler)

Salukipilot4590 02-12-2014 10:19 AM

Yes, eventually we'll see a lot of funky things. Isn't eagle doing something like this already?

yimke 02-12-2014 10:21 AM


Originally Posted by Salukipilot4590 (Post 1579749)
Yes, eventually we'll see a lot of funky things. Isn't eagle doing something like this already?

Yes, 10,000 scholarship for embry riddle students with 3.0 gpa. Which is really chump change there. So nothing serious yet.

Salukipilot4590 02-12-2014 10:35 AM

Wish someone would give ME 5% of what my college education and lack of sexual activity for 4 years cost.....

lolwut 02-12-2014 10:36 AM


Originally Posted by Salukipilot4590 (Post 1579765)
Wish someone would give ME 5% of what my college education and lack of sexual activity for 4 years cost.....

I think you can get that from a regional airline scheduling department pretty easily, its just not the fun kind.

waflyboy 02-12-2014 10:41 AM

I think a push for some version of MPL will come first. Sponsorship programs to follow.

Chupacabras 02-12-2014 06:33 PM

Its actually cheaper to just increase regional pay than to pay for someones training who may flunk out; meaning lost time and money by airlines. Imagine a regional investing 100K into a pilot for training and at least a few years in time. Then that pilot decides he/she no longer wants to be a pilot and purposely fails his check ride or quits. Or maybe he fails out of training altogether...how much money and time would be wasted?
The best candidate for this job is someone who loves to fly and proves this by investing time and money into his/her own training. The expense and time of flight training weeds out those that really aren't cut out for it. The wiser thing is to pay this person like a professional, say 60k to start(less that 100k) in training.

I think the industry tried paying for pilot training in the 60s and 70s with not so good results.

Salukipilot4590 02-12-2014 06:36 PM


Originally Posted by Chupacabras (Post 1580222)
I think the industry tried paying for pilot training in the 60s and 70s with not so good results.

Yeah now those guys are working an additional 5 years....

YAY!!

JamesNoBrakes 02-12-2014 07:00 PM

It depends on if they can get the cost of training down somehow. Auto-interviews and hiring by way of agreements/bridge programs are much more likely.


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