Mainline buying regionals
#171
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 12,833
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From: window seat
I agree with all of the above, IF of course you manage to even get called for the interview in the first place. With thousands of regional drivers having their apps out and still waiting for a call so that they can even find out if they're mainline material, I think that's where a lot of the bitterness comes from. Bad attitude? Tool to fly with? How would they know if they don't interview them?
And even if the legacies instantly interviewed every regional pilot and they had a 100% hire rate, they'd have to be replaced with more regional pilots, and then they'd want an instant intrview with a 100% hire rate, etc…
Mass hiring has only begun, yet we've already seen significant angst about getting the call from not only regional pilots but military and others as well. Its been a rough bottleneck for sure, and I and I think most people certainly understand that. But what we've seen so far is just the tip of the spear. I think its safe to say that the significant majority of regional pilots with active apps out will get calls for interviews in the coming few years, especially those that network and actively manage their careers (and even many that don't).
Add hard work and prep to that, and the success rates will be very high IMO.
#173
Good points by all for the most part. I still find it ironic about so called "vetting" as previously mentioned. I imagine there were numerous Western and NWA pilots that applied to DAL and were turned down at Delta and went on to Western and NWA. Now working for DAL as they should be. No vetting just an acceptance of another companies interview and training or more likely a "forced acceptance" due to airlines contracts and ALPA's merger fragmentation policy.
Cannot argue about comments about hard work and preparation of/for interviewing for any job. Always good advice. The rub is ALPA's under or misrepresentation to regional pilots during a mainline buyout. Mainline pilots may argue how less equal, less quality or a poor interview process at regionals and that may be true. I'm sure most if not all regional pilots would say our training is on par with mainlines and the end product is the same. Spending a year or years at any regional IS NOT an easy way in to any mainline career! Before I started a career in aviation I did not know about a great void between mainline and regionals within ALPA. I still do not except that at mainline you at least receive adequate representation during a buy out where as at regionals there is NONE!
Cannot argue about comments about hard work and preparation of/for interviewing for any job. Always good advice. The rub is ALPA's under or misrepresentation to regional pilots during a mainline buyout. Mainline pilots may argue how less equal, less quality or a poor interview process at regionals and that may be true. I'm sure most if not all regional pilots would say our training is on par with mainlines and the end product is the same. Spending a year or years at any regional IS NOT an easy way in to any mainline career! Before I started a career in aviation I did not know about a great void between mainline and regionals within ALPA. I still do not except that at mainline you at least receive adequate representation during a buy out where as at regionals there is NONE!
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