ULCC model in the USA weakening
#121
You and guys like you have made that statement (economic downturn, furloughs, human sacrifice, cats and dogs living together, mass hysteria) claim all through this mass hiring spree at legacies over the last 5+ years. And that mass hiring at legacies is going to continue for another decade, with or without an economic downturn.
You need to find a new boogey man to scare your fellow NKers from applying to the legacies.
You need to find a new boogey man to scare your fellow NKers from applying to the legacies.
#122
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 5,213
Likes: 14
From: guppy CA
and layoffs. Of course it's coming. day. Keep crying wolf.
#123
Im not crying anything. I have been part of two of them. Im informed. Maybe slow down happens, Maybe it doesnt. The reality is that it may, and that it has in the last. Preparation is built from studying history. But when you're only 28 years old, you've got zero perspective. You're still fresh to the workforce.
#124
Line Holder
Joined: Sep 2020
Posts: 1,591
Likes: 373
United is expecting 150 aircraft deliveries in 2024 and they want to hire 4,000 but probably won't be able to. They think they can do 300 new hires a month maximum.
United has hired 2,500 pilots in the last 12 months and they are finishing up a new sim building with 12 more simulators because of the training ramp-up. The 3/5 airframe number is BS and doesn't exist. United Fleet Website is public and shows all the deliveries and airframes being parked. Planes are being delivered so quickly we still have 800+ unfilled vacancies on each monthly bid, with 50-80 unfilled Captain on each one.
#126
Not so much as it screams pilot shortage with insufficient incentive for upgrade. It’s already hit the regionals. No reason to believe the majors would somehow be immune. With increased salaries for the senior FOs fewer seem willing to take the QOL hit of becoming the bottom of a new seniority list.
#127
Line Holder
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 1,227
Likes: 34
From: baller, shot caller
Im not crying anything. I have been part of two of them. Im informed. Maybe slow down happens, Maybe it doesnt. The reality is that it may, and that it has in the last. Preparation is built from studying history. But when you're only 28 years old, you've got zero perspective. You're still fresh to the workforce.
2008 alone left an ugly scar on a lot of us, especially those of us who were in our 20s and new to the industry while trying to establish some sort of stability in life. I don't think any of us forgot just how ugly and bleak things became.
#128
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 5,213
Likes: 14
From: guppy CA
On the pilot side, the floor for lines were running in the high 70s to low 80s for many BESs this last summer. They are short on pilots and United won't reach peak retirements for another few years; currently about 400 pilot retirements a year. Compare that with NK/F9/etc retirements they're a slow trickle for the next two decades. United is also upguaging former RJ routes to mainline which increases the need for mainline pilots.
On the passenger side, Q2's load factor was 86.4% with record profits.
Not so much as it screams pilot shortage with insufficient incentive for upgrade. It’s already hit the regionals. No reason to believe the majors would somehow be immune. With increased salaries for the senior FOs fewer seem willing to take the QOL hit of becoming the bottom of a new seniority list.
Progression has been rapid since the end of Covid so any QOL hit is short lived. I'd attribute the unfilled CA vacancies more due to the fact that 1) the sheer volume of monthly CA vacancies, and 2) if one doesn't bid for an upgrade this month, they can next month or any other month.
#129
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 5,213
Likes: 14
From: guppy CA
You can discuss hypotheticals as much as you like, but you are ignoring the very real upcoming multiyear merger pain.
#130
Poor analysis. You guys are always trying to spin eveything at the legacies as bad things. It's very humorous to read the collective take on unfilled CA vacancies by those whose companies have very few CA vacancies.
Progression has been rapid since the end of Covid so any QOL hit is short lived. I'd attribute the unfilled CA vacancies more due to the fact that 1) the sheer volume of monthly CA vacancies, and 2) if one doesn't bid for an upgrade this month, they can next month or any other month.
1. A pilot shortage
2. A reluctance of senior FOs to give up their seat seniority by upgrading. Both those issues give leverage to pilot groups for increased $ and better QOL in their next CBAs. Perhaps you consider that a “bad” thing. I certainly do not.
A rising tide lifts all boats, big and little.
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