confusedalot wrote:Hey don't get me wrong, the more the money, the better it is.
Two questions;
1-What is an appropriate starting salary for a regional airline, and what is the appropriate starting salary for a "major" airline?
2-Could you associate names to the 703 rotational operators that pay 85K and 100K for operating a light aircraft?
Times are changing alright. I missed the boat because my year of birth was not quite in line with the stars.........
Answers:
1:An appropriate starting salary for a regional FO living in an expensive city and paying off student debt should be $60k minimum, NOT including overtime over 85 hours or per diems. For an airline, you have at least proven you are very well established and able to at least handle a big bird, and judging of what and who you are flying, it should be start at 80k minimum for FO.
2: NAC and ACA. For NAC, it was out of Peace River with no commuting available and only 7 on 7 off with the possibility of 10 on and 10 off but no guarantee you will get home at end of rotation which is a no no for me. They really would need to include confirmed travel if it was up to me since I would never live up North or relocate up there anymore. For ACA, they managed to find people from within the company for their new YMM start up base. Too bad. Also no travel, but at least it was in YMM with paid housing and airlines fly in and out of YMM making commuting easy.
It is just crazy how Jazz is taking 750 hour pilots, yet some 500-750 hour guys I have trained and see try their ride up North in the bush have difficulties with it, which only leads to one conclusion: are the 750 hr pilots really "safe" with enough life experience under their belt to really understand what it is that these regionals are asking you to do in terms of risk, and for that low of a pay? I mean come on. I have recently heard Air Canada is also taking in new recruits with little experience from Seneca...do we need to talk about the AC incident the other day at SFO when they almost landed on the taxiway? I don't know who the pilots were, but I'm sure thinking it wasn't a 30 year "professional" veteran at the controls...