Quote:
Originally Posted by sherpster
So for clarification: #1 at AA/DAL/UAL where you can fly when, what, and where you want for bottom of the list at Fedex flying night hub turns and flying out of Memphis? Just want to be clear thats what you are saying. Have you ever flown pax before? Very little contact. If you hate the terminal and TSA maybe I would get it but even then, #1 for the bottom? I stand by my statement.
BTW, I am a new hire at AA and I have been able to swap/drop my schedule completely around this summer and this is our "peak" season. Amazing the ability to change your schedule here. No weekends in July with only 6 days of flying and I turned around and picked up a 2.5 day trip ( wanted to visit a friend in a layover city) so now I am at 9 days. I am junior, imagine if I was senior (like say #1). They say AA has the worst contract, if this is bad then I cant imagine how good UAL and Delta are for trip trading and dropping. But hey, enjoy FedEx and I will enjoy AA.
Yes, I have flown pax before, and there was plenty of contact with fa's/pax. I was always ending up dealing with pax, walking some old lady to her gate, expected to give directions and have intimate knowledge of every airport, just because I was a person in uniform. People glaring at me for being the last to show (called up on reserve), as if it was my fault the flight was delayed. FA's constantly coming up to the cockpit to chat with the pilots. And nowadays everyone has an iPhone camera on them. This is all fine for someone who is an extrovert and thrives on this....painful for an introvert. If we have an engine failure, smoke and fumes, we don't even make the newspaper. We might not even get an email from the company about it after filing an ASAP report.
I worked 1/2-2/3 a schedule for 18 years at FedEx when my kids were at home. Having the option to drop everything the months you want off, and pick up as much as you want the months you want to work extra is key. I'm glad AA has flexibility now, as back in the day what you were awarded was what you flew. Your hours increases were limited, and options to swap/drop were nil.
If I was a newhire, and I could be one of those Delta 900K+ captains on the first day for the next 30 years, yes, I'd choose that. But in my current situation where lifestyle is key and pay is not, I'd still be the bottom guy at FedEx, since people are moving up quickly, some are still hired into widebody slots. I'm flying widebody daytime deadhead trips with newhires, and it amazes me. However, at some point this is going to all come to an end, and no, I wouldn't want to be the last one hired into the right seat of the 757 for the rest of my career.
I apologize for the thread drift.