CanadaAir wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 6:04 am
Bede wrote: ↑Wed Sep 13, 2023 6:45 pm
CanadaAir wrote: ↑Wed Sep 13, 2023 5:51 pm
The second thing which you’re discussing is whether a pilot should be paid 1:1 for the time they are at the airport on duty in uniform. Many airlines have rules that are now 1:2
Should it be 1:1?
So you're asking if I prefer to be paid on duty time rather than credit?
Consider that the flight credit system remains similar to current.
The change would be for every hour on duty while not flying, you are now paid 1:1. One hour of pay for every hour on duty not flying.
This could be for time spent waiting around for boarding, delays, weather, maintenance, empty time between flights.
There are airlines paying 50% for this time, some smaller companies do not pay for this time, only flight time.
Do you think it should be 100% instead of 50%?
Your questions are a "false dilemma" and unfortunately contain informal fallacies in your logical reasoning. You provide incorrect comparisons based on false premises.
If the question is "do I think pilots should get paid more with a better schedule?" my answer is "sure!"
But this line of reasoning based on incorrect comparisons to an inaccurate description of "standard worker" simply does not follow. It's the same as saying "an airline needs a CEO and an airline needs Flight Attendants", the CEO makes $2 million per year so Flight Attendants should make $2 million per year because that's what the CEO makes. It's an argument and I'm sure FA's would love to make $2 million but it’s easy to see the problems with that argument.
With regard to Flight Credit vs. Duty Credit vs. Time Away From Base. Determining how pilots get paid is always an interesting discussion. But your logic falls apart with your false assumption that "Consider the flight credit system remains similar to current". If we fundamentally change the way pilots are paid, why would an employer agree to keep the credit system the same?
This doesn't even look at the consequences of what would happen with a drastic change in pilot pay. Businesses are all about maximizing productivity of resources. If the equation for determining pilot utilization was altered, do you think pilots' schedules would look the same? The scheduling software would find the most productive way to minimize costs and schedules would look completely different (and, in my opinion, be significantly worse based on the renewed focus on duty productivity).
For example, I'm on a pairing right now that involves a 23 hour layover in a cool city. I like that. One of the reasons the company schedules a layover is that due to duty regulations, there have been a few times where delays cause flight crews to exceed their duty time and/or the return flight needs to be cancelled. While the company wouldn't necessarily want to pay hotel, transportation and TAFB costs for the crew, it's cheaper than the relatively high risk of having to cancel flights. However, if our TAFB costs were to drastically increase, that changes the equation. Suddenly, the cost of occasionally having to cancel a flight, send it to a different destination and re-accommodate all the passengers is actually less than paying to keep a crew overnight in the city. True story, our Flight Attendants used to get this layover too, but with their new contract, if they exceed duty time they simply get a small extra payment. The pilots get a nice layover, the flight attendants get a 13 hour duty day that occasionally gets extended.
Luckily, at my airline there are lots of options for single day pairings for those pilots that prefer to sleep in their own bed every single night.
I enjoyed going to an MLB baseball game last night in a cool US city and had an awesome sleep in a quiet hotel bed with no kids. I slept really well knowing that with RIGS, on this pairing I'll get paid the better of total flight credits, 1:2 duty time or 1:4 Time Away From Base. It's a nice balance of ensuring I get paid for my full time, while also providing scheduling attributes that I really like.