He couldn’t believe the salary offered at AC

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And the average years in the industry of an FO at Air France is likely a fraction of years in the industry an FO at AC has.....
First of all, that is completely irrelevant... You want to compare apples to apples, legacy to legacy, this is how you compare, and secondly, how do you actually know how long it takes to get right seat at Air France vs AC? You may be comparing it to today, where 2000 hours may get you in at AC, given the industry is moving at warp speed, but that wasn't the case 5 plus years ago
25% is fuckall im sorry... we can do alot better. Especially at the bottom end. The company can easily afford to pay every captain 50% more today everyday. They just dont. And they love the fact that most pilots are beaten into thinking that they cant.
Min 25% is at the top. Flat pay should be limited and at a dramatically higher rate (min 6 figures second year).dh89 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 6:20 pm25% is fuckall im sorry... we can do alot better. Especially at the bottom end. The company can easily afford to pay every captain 50% more today everyday. They just dont. And they love the fact that most pilots are beaten into thinking that they cant.
Now at the bottom end of the pay scale... dont get me started... damn!
Anyways... all for one and one for all. "Historic" gains should mean going beyond historic pay, and early 2000's contracts were part of our history. In my perfect world we can do much better than those!
Trust me, company can afford it. They know it. They dont want you to know or think it.
Best of luck to you all! I hope the pressure tide rises and continues.
Agreedrudder wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 7:02 pmMin 25% is at the top. Flat pay should be limited and at a dramatically higher rate (min 6 figures second year).dh89 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 6:20 pm25% is fuckall im sorry... we can do alot better. Especially at the bottom end. The company can easily afford to pay every captain 50% more today everyday. They just dont. And they love the fact that most pilots are beaten into thinking that they cant.
Now at the bottom end of the pay scale... dont get me started... damn!
Anyways... all for one and one for all. "Historic" gains should mean going beyond historic pay, and early 2000's contracts were part of our history. In my perfect world we can do much better than those!
Trust me, company can afford it. They know it. They dont want you to know or think it.
Best of luck to you all! I hope the pressure tide rises and continues.
The point to illustrate is compounding. It is no different than compound interest. Done correctly a new-hire 2023 with 30 years of service should have a near astronomical career earnings at AC.
I think you're reading that statement backwards.twa22 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 1:39 pmFirst of all, that is completely irrelevant... You want to compare apples to apples, legacy to legacy, this is how you compare, and secondly, how do you actually know how long it takes to get right seat at Air France vs AC? You may be comparing it to today, where 2000 hours may get you in at AC, given the industry is moving at warp speed, but that wasn't the case 5 plus years ago
40% year one, 20% more over 2 more years. Plus one year probation and then formula. Plus 10% more for the narrowbodies. Plus FOs back to 65% CA pay. Plus delete the RP position. Plus fix vacation credit. Plus no more optimizing blocks. Plus 5:30 calendar day average. Plus pension is 100% employer paid. Plus a whole lot more, we're worth it and this group is ready to do what it takes to earn it.rudder wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 7:02 pmMin 25% is at the top. Flat pay should be limited and at a dramatically higher rate (min 6 figures second year).dh89 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 6:20 pm25% is fuckall im sorry... we can do alot better. Especially at the bottom end. The company can easily afford to pay every captain 50% more today everyday. They just dont. And they love the fact that most pilots are beaten into thinking that they cant.
Now at the bottom end of the pay scale... dont get me started... damn!
Anyways... all for one and one for all. "Historic" gains should mean going beyond historic pay, and early 2000's contracts were part of our history. In my perfect world we can do much better than those!
Trust me, company can afford it. They know it. They dont want you to know or think it.
Best of luck to you all! I hope the pressure tide rises and continues.
The point to illustrate is compounding. It is no different than compound interest. Done correctly a new-hire 2023 with 30 years of service should have a near astronomical career earnings at AC.
PREACH!altiplano wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 8:03 pm40% year one, 20% more over 2 more years. Plus one year probation and then formula. Plus 10% more for the narrowbodies. Plus FOs back to 65% CA pay. Plus delete the RP position. Plus fix vacation credit. Plus no more optimizing blocks. Plus 5:30 calendar day average. Plus pension is 100% employer paid. Plus a whole lot more, we're worth it and this group is ready to do what it takes to earn it.rudder wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 7:02 pmMin 25% is at the top. Flat pay should be limited and at a dramatically higher rate (min 6 figures second year).dh89 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 6:20 pm
25% is fuckall im sorry... we can do alot better. Especially at the bottom end. The company can easily afford to pay every captain 50% more today everyday. They just dont. And they love the fact that most pilots are beaten into thinking that they cant.
Now at the bottom end of the pay scale... dont get me started... damn!
Anyways... all for one and one for all. "Historic" gains should mean going beyond historic pay, and early 2000's contracts were part of our history. In my perfect world we can do much better than those!
Trust me, company can afford it. They know it. They dont want you to know or think it.
Best of luck to you all! I hope the pressure tide rises and continues.
The point to illustrate is compounding. It is no different than compound interest. Done correctly a new-hire 2023 with 30 years of service should have a near astronomical career earnings at AC.
Ha, I clearly was, oopsaltiplano wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 7:57 pmI think you're reading that statement backwards.twa22 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 1:39 pmFirst of all, that is completely irrelevant... You want to compare apples to apples, legacy to legacy, this is how you compare, and secondly, how do you actually know how long it takes to get right seat at Air France vs AC? You may be comparing it to today, where 2000 hours may get you in at AC, given the industry is moving at warp speed, but that wasn't the case 5 plus years ago
Flat pay should simply be abolished. Same work, same equipment same pay. Get a little extra year over years simply for YOS. Not this 4 year shenanigans of 'paying your dues'.altiplano wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 8:03 pm40% year one, 20% more over 2 more years. Plus one year probation and then formula. Plus 10% more for the narrowbodies. Plus FOs back to 65% CA pay. Plus delete the RP position. Plus fix vacation credit. Plus no more optimizing blocks. Plus 5:30 calendar day average. Plus pension is 100% employer paid. Plus a whole lot more, we're worth it and this group is ready to do what it takes to earn it.rudder wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 7:02 pmMin 25% is at the top. Flat pay should be limited and at a dramatically higher rate (min 6 figures second year).dh89 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2023 6:20 pm
25% is fuckall im sorry... we can do alot better. Especially at the bottom end. The company can easily afford to pay every captain 50% more today everyday. They just dont. And they love the fact that most pilots are beaten into thinking that they cant.
Now at the bottom end of the pay scale... dont get me started... damn!
Anyways... all for one and one for all. "Historic" gains should mean going beyond historic pay, and early 2000's contracts were part of our history. In my perfect world we can do much better than those!
Trust me, company can afford it. They know it. They dont want you to know or think it.
Best of luck to you all! I hope the pressure tide rises and continues.
The point to illustrate is compounding. It is no different than compound interest. Done correctly a new-hire 2023 with 30 years of service should have a near astronomical career earnings at AC.
I have revised my minimum pay expectation to match yours.Ash Ketchum wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 5:59 am I think it would be fair to have 1 year of probationary pay due to the nature of aircraft assignments in PIT (names pulled out of a hat) but that pay should start at least at 100K. No AC pilot should earn less than six figures.
Real unions don’t buy into supply and demand. United, Delta, American FedEx. Not a single one of them have a pilot supply issue.up on one wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:52 am Once again supply and demand will dictate. I would love to see the lowest paid 705 pilot making six figures but let’s be honest with ourselves. Let’s take a look at the 703 operators for example. Many of their captains have the ability to see 150-180k on their T4 assuming they stick around for a full year but we know they all have an application in at AC. AC is actively hiring these low time pilots along with pilots with jet types, jet pic as well as pilots making bank from overseas and that’s the issue. So, I have a question for everyone who honestly believes flat pay will disappear. We need to think about this objectively, not as a pilot but rather someone who will get a big bonus in stock options based on the outcome. If we have pilots still actively applying (and we do)and gladly accepting the worlds lowest airline salary (and they are) why would that be on the bargaining table? What will we as a pilot group give up in our future in exchange for flat pay to help the next generation or will we continue to pass the buck to our kids?
+1Fanblade wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 6:57 pmReal unions don’t buy into supply and demand. United, Delta, American FedEx. Not a single one of them have a pilot supply issue.up on one wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:52 am Once again supply and demand will dictate. I would love to see the lowest paid 705 pilot making six figures but let’s be honest with ourselves. Let’s take a look at the 703 operators for example. Many of their captains have the ability to see 150-180k on their T4 assuming they stick around for a full year but we know they all have an application in at AC. AC is actively hiring these low time pilots along with pilots with jet types, jet pic as well as pilots making bank from overseas and that’s the issue. So, I have a question for everyone who honestly believes flat pay will disappear. We need to think about this objectively, not as a pilot but rather someone who will get a big bonus in stock options based on the outcome. If we have pilots still actively applying (and we do)and gladly accepting the worlds lowest airline salary (and they are) why would that be on the bargaining table? What will we as a pilot group give up in our future in exchange for flat pay to help the next generation or will we continue to pass the buck to our kids?
Unionism is about the strength that comes from unity and determination.
Unity and determination will dictate what happens to flat salary.
This is bang on727driver wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 10:20 am Most people applying are doing so to get a seniority number to hedge their bets that flat pay will all but be eliminated on the next contract within the next year and/or a quick upgrade after a year. I would suspect that both bargaining parties are aware that applicants will fall off a cliff once people feel flat pay is here to stay and getting a number north of 5000 will ensure many years of flat pay ahead of you.
Fact is pilots (and unions) in the US realize their worth and don't take any shit. Canadian pilots are spineless losers with an inferiority complex who continue to allow management to step all over them. And continue to line up for what are nothing less than embarrassing wawcon.Fanblade wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 6:57 pmReal unions don’t buy into supply and demand. United, Delta, American FedEx. Not a single one of them have a pilot supply issue.up on one wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:52 am Once again supply and demand will dictate. I would love to see the lowest paid 705 pilot making six figures but let’s be honest with ourselves. Let’s take a look at the 703 operators for example. Many of their captains have the ability to see 150-180k on their T4 assuming they stick around for a full year but we know they all have an application in at AC. AC is actively hiring these low time pilots along with pilots with jet types, jet pic as well as pilots making bank from overseas and that’s the issue. So, I have a question for everyone who honestly believes flat pay will disappear. We need to think about this objectively, not as a pilot but rather someone who will get a big bonus in stock options based on the outcome. If we have pilots still actively applying (and we do)and gladly accepting the worlds lowest airline salary (and they are) why would that be on the bargaining table? What will we as a pilot group give up in our future in exchange for flat pay to help the next generation or will we continue to pass the buck to our kids?
Unionism is about the strength that comes from unity and determination.
Unity and determination will dictate what happens to flat salary.
I'm curious where you work, because you shit in every thread you touch... i'm not here to defend the new Westjet CA, or what's happening with AC and where it will lead, but man, take a break... Westjet is at least moving in the right direction, and the hope is AC will beat WJ, which should move things further along... US regional FO's were making 20k a year around 10 years ago, and now look how far they've come... here's some old links so you can all amuse yourself, I couldn't stop laughing when I saw these pay scalesthepoors wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2023 4:12 pmFact is pilots (and unions) in the US realize their worth and don't take any shit. Canadian pilots are spineless losers with an inferiority complex who continue to allow management to step all over them. And continue to line up for what are nothing less than embarrassing wawcon.Fanblade wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 6:57 pmReal unions don’t buy into supply and demand. United, Delta, American FedEx. Not a single one of them have a pilot supply issue.up on one wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:52 am Once again supply and demand will dictate. I would love to see the lowest paid 705 pilot making six figures but let’s be honest with ourselves. Let’s take a look at the 703 operators for example. Many of their captains have the ability to see 150-180k on their T4 assuming they stick around for a full year but we know they all have an application in at AC. AC is actively hiring these low time pilots along with pilots with jet types, jet pic as well as pilots making bank from overseas and that’s the issue. So, I have a question for everyone who honestly believes flat pay will disappear. We need to think about this objectively, not as a pilot but rather someone who will get a big bonus in stock options based on the outcome. If we have pilots still actively applying (and we do)and gladly accepting the worlds lowest airline salary (and they are) why would that be on the bargaining table? What will we as a pilot group give up in our future in exchange for flat pay to help the next generation or will we continue to pass the buck to our kids?
Unionism is about the strength that comes from unity and determination.
Unity and determination will dictate what happens to flat salary.
Exhibit A: WJ pilot group voting 87% yes to just getting back what they've been robbed of for the past 4 years. Gains??...no where to be seen, but they're celebrating like what they've achieved is some victory.
Exhibit B: AC can't fill new hire classes fast enough.
It's sad and pathetic. Wouldn't surprise me if flat pay sticks around, because as a group Canadian pilots are weak willed morons who will take whatever garbage gets tossed their way with a smile and a thank you.
WestJet pilots will be taking home 50% more pay on the bottom end. That is a victory in my mind.thepoors wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2023 4:12 pm
Fact is pilots (and unions) in the US realize their worth and don't take any shit. Canadian pilots are spineless losers with an inferiority complex who continue to allow management to step all over them. And continue to line up for what are nothing less than embarrassing wawcon.
Exhibit A: WJ pilot group voting 87% yes to just getting back what they've been robbed of for the past 4 years. Gains??...no where to be seen, but they're celebrating like what they've achieved is some victory.
Exhibit B: AC can't fill new hire classes fast enough.
It's sad and pathetic. Wouldn't surprise me if flat pay sticks around, because as a group Canadian pilots are weak willed morons who will take whatever garbage gets tossed their way with a smile and a thank you.
I work somewhere that pays what I'm worth (goes without saying that's not any airline in Canada). I don't have to live in my parents' basement or visit a food bank to feed my kids while being responsible for a 200,000 lbs aircraft with 200+ lives in the back. And I would like to see the people who do, not have to make those kinds of ridiculous trade-offs. That's why I'm mad.twa22 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2023 5:52 pmI'm curious where you work, because you shit in every thread you touch... i'm not here to defend the new Westjet CA, or what's happening with AC and where it will lead, but man, take a break... Westjet is at least moving in the right direction, and the hope is AC will beat WJ, which should move things further along... US regional FO's were making 20k a year around 10 years ago, and now look how far they've come... here's some old links so you can all amuse yourself, I couldn't stop laughing when I saw these pay scalesthepoors wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2023 4:12 pmFact is pilots (and unions) in the US realize their worth and don't take any shit. Canadian pilots are spineless losers with an inferiority complex who continue to allow management to step all over them. And continue to line up for what are nothing less than embarrassing wawcon.Fanblade wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 6:57 pm
Real unions don’t buy into supply and demand. United, Delta, American FedEx. Not a single one of them have a pilot supply issue.
Unionism is about the strength that comes from unity and determination.
Unity and determination will dictate what happens to flat salary.
Exhibit A: WJ pilot group voting 87% yes to just getting back what they've been robbed of for the past 4 years. Gains??...no where to be seen, but they're celebrating like what they've achieved is some victory.
Exhibit B: AC can't fill new hire classes fast enough.
It's sad and pathetic. Wouldn't surprise me if flat pay sticks around, because as a group Canadian pilots are weak willed morons who will take whatever garbage gets tossed their way with a smile and a thank you.
http://willflyforfood.com/airline-pilot ... lines.html
http://willflyforfood.com/airline-pilot ... onsin.html
http://willflyforfood.com/airline-pilot ... rways.html
Oh, that's regionals... ok, how about the majors, they were better, but not by much...
http://willflyforfood.com/airline-pilot ... lines.html
http://willflyforfood.com/airline-pilot ... lines.html
only ones that were paying decent even back then was Delta
http://willflyforfood.com/airline-pilot ... Lines.html