Attrition
#1122
Not sure about delta.
This all because they suddenly put more people in the doors than they could train because of some very big vacancy bids post COVID created a massive amount of stress on their training centers. Rest assured they can do 70 or 90 a week and will. Attrition will not stop.
My latest DH FO was the last person standing from his newhire class. And they hadn't reached a year yet.
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#1123
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2021
Posts: 1,035
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I'm not entirely sure why anyone thinks attrition is a leverage tool for spirit pilots. If anything it's a leverage tool for spirit management. With training pay where it is and first year pay what it is, they couldn't be happier for people leaving. The more senior the better
The legacies pay 90+ an hour from day one, we pay 50whatever from day 91-365
If we were to absorb training pay into first year pay our actual rate is more like 46 dollars an hour. It's an embarrassment. Management HOPES people leave. Honestly.
The legacies pay 90+ an hour from day one, we pay 50whatever from day 91-365
If we were to absorb training pay into first year pay our actual rate is more like 46 dollars an hour. It's an embarrassment. Management HOPES people leave. Honestly.
#1124
It’s exactly the reasons we got our last contract. We had to start hiring lower time pilots and had a ton of training washouts. They added a sim session and that helped a little then XJT closed its atl base and we got an influx of experienced pilots but it was all temporary. After a bit the low timers got hired again and the washout rate ticked up and they were forced to the table to keep the growth plan on track. This isn’t different, it’s worse
but anyway, what's happening now is absolutely going to blow their socks off compared to what happened in 2015,2016 2017 and 2018. I am literally flying with nobody who plans on staying. NONE. It is very very reminiscent to my last year at SkyWest.
#1126
It’s exactly the reasons we got our last contract. We had to start hiring lower time pilots and had a ton of training washouts. They added a sim session and that helped a little then XJT closed its atl base and we got an influx of experienced pilots but it was all temporary. After a bit the low timers got hired again and the washout rate ticked up and they were forced to the table to keep the growth plan on track. This isn’t different, it’s worse
The ones at greatest risk of getting screwed now are the senior guys with the most time invested in NK. For most FOs, they can hop to a legacy and break even financially on the switch and be right back to the same relative seniority in 2-3 years. For the senior guys, they’ll lose more and take longer to make it up.
#1127
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2021
Posts: 1,035
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A very real problem now is the attrition in management. no matter if NK becomes B6 or F9, most of management will not be coming along for the ride. That means most of them are fine tuning their own résumés and getting ready to make the leap themselves. It is not an atmosphere much conducive to fixing problems at NK because they too have an ‘on my way out’ mindset. Why negotiate a CBA? It’ll just be wasted effort, because a JCBA will still be required anyway. Besides, it might not be what whoever eventually owns the place wants for the starting position for the JCBA. More better to just take the golden parachute and go somewhere else rather than dealing with the messiness of the transfer.
The ones at greatest risk of getting screwed now are the senior guys with the most time invested in NK. For most FOs, they can hop to a legacy and break even financially on the switch and be right back to the same relative seniority in 2-3 years. For the senior guys, they’ll lose more and take longer to make it up.
The ones at greatest risk of getting screwed now are the senior guys with the most time invested in NK. For most FOs, they can hop to a legacy and break even financially on the switch and be right back to the same relative seniority in 2-3 years. For the senior guys, they’ll lose more and take longer to make it up.
#1128
Line Holder
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 1,069
Likes: 25
Which is why first year pay isn’t the problem. We don’t have an issue hiring pilots, plenty of bushy eyed 1500 pilots on the next thread. Retention could bethe issue. As long as people show up to indoc, Spirit is happy.
We lost 30 pilots last month and it looks like 23 were way of resignation to another airline and 7 to training. That isn’t enough to move the needle. Retention or acquisition isn’t the issue as of now.
We lost 30 pilots last month and it looks like 23 were way of resignation to another airline and 7 to training. That isn’t enough to move the needle. Retention or acquisition isn’t the issue as of now.
#1130
But if you lose 30 a month in May, June and July where will the operation be by then? Anybody hired today will not be done with training/OE until late summer at the earliest, so have they hired enough already to account for the 100 ish pilots that will leave in the coming summer. Having enough to cover April is one thing, but the summer schedule is a whole nother story
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