BobPatterson wrote:Compare the starting salaries for doctors, lawyers and engineers with those for pilots, then decide who is better able to handle trade school debts.
I'm not advocating for debt. And I am not a fan of $300,000 salaries for pilots. But I equate a fully qualified first officer/pilot with a journeyman plumber or electrician. They have all paid the dues to learn their craft and they all should be paid living wages.
The fly in the ointment is that generally, the plumber or electrician is paid while going through apprenticeship, while many budding pilots are not. It is at least logical that airlines should pay for the training of their new pilots. This could be done through a national air academy program, jointly funded by all airlines (and perhaps also by a military ROTC type program).
Actually, I used those careers because I have friends and family that are in those very fields. Those first few years are brutal for all of them. Medical gets half way decent pay, but has brutal hours. Law gets very poor pay early on and can include mountains of nonbillable hours. Early career engineers are often being paid entry wages as essentially assistants and carry a lot of the load for the less interesting grunt work of various projects, often with many unpaid hours thrown in as well.
Early career is hard for many people. What many pilots have, though, is that they are ex military and already have a lot of their training behind them when they choose an AP career. Yes, it's harder for the ones that decide to foot their own bill and climb up from a first flight in a cessna, just as its harder for an engineer to decide to go the private school and foot their own post grad bill route. And, arguably, mistakes by any of them can get people killed, including lawyers not doing a good job in defense of their client and surrendering an unwarranted conviction.
Pilots have a high risk job, but they aren't special snowflakes. Yes, work rules need to be reasonable, and pay should be liveable for a career pilot, but it also doesn't mean that being paid less for flying smaller planes is wrong either. And, for an airline that has 1000 pilots, every million you take from a manager will average to $20 a week for each pilot, except that, it won't actually spread that way, the highest seniority pilots will wind up with over $100 a week and the ones starting out will get roughly $5. That won't even get one lunch at the airport cafeteria with an employee discount. If you took 2 million from each of the 5 highest paid execs, you still wouldn't help the new pilots, but the most senior guys would love it a lot, until that airline lost its top level execs and became uncompetitive.
You know where the most help for starting pilots can come from? The union. It just has to flatten the pay scale more to start pilots off higher and pay for it by lowering the top end some. I'm not asking senior pilots to live on pauper wages, but there is room to help those starting out have an easier time of it.
As for scope clauses, I get it. Having the ability for outside pilots to come in and compete for flying the smaller regional is bad for business for the union. Absolutely go for the clause while you have the upper hand. But I don't want to hear it when fuel prices start to go up again and the smaller, less able to spread out pilot cost planes start getting parked and the union numbers start to dwindle as pilots get laid off. Though, it's not that mainline pilots would have been flying those smaller planes in the first place, it's that those smaller planes would be feeding more passengers into the system keeping more of the larger planes busier.