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#111
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Garner Miller wrote:
Don Hammer wrote: Try looking at the real killers of the company; those egotistical union pilots that get $250K + a year for 20 hours of work a month.... Surely a group of pilots should know better than to believe that. VERY few pilots approach anything close to what you describe, and if they do, it's for about a year before they turn 60. The rest of us are away from home 400 hours a month (compared to your typical nine-to-five gone less than half of that), and dreaming of the day we hit the six-figure mark. Ah, yes, the "greedy union pilots." Try being a seventh-year employee at a regional airline, flying as a Part 121 captain, for less than 40K a year. Try and balance that against your mythical 20-hour, $250K captain. Lower regional airline pay and longer hours are two of the reasons the majors have problems. Here are some quotes from an article written in 2001 about pilot pay at the major airlines: "A 10-year captain of Boeing 737-200s makes $157,152 at Delta, and $178,152 at United. The most senior captain, with 30 years of experience, flying a Boeing 777 wide-body, makes $248,040 at Delta, and $254,748 at United." "Delta pilots are expected to top United pilots, who now stand with the highest pay among passenger carriers." "In September, McCain compared the 1998 per capital U.S. income of $20,120 with the $342,000 a year that the most senior United pilots will make by 2004." Full article he http://archives.californiaaviation.o.../msg00010.html |
#112
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"Garner Miller" wrote in message ... In article , Don Hammer wrote: Try looking at the real killers of the company; those egotistical union pilots that get $250K + a year for 20 hours of work a month.... Surely a group of pilots should know better than to believe that. VERY few pilots approach anything close to what you describe, and if they do, it's for about a year before they turn 60. The rest of us are away from home 400 hours a month (compared to your typical nine-to-five gone less than half of that), and dreaming of the day we hit the six-figure mark. Ah, yes, the "greedy union pilots." Try being a seventh-year employee at a regional airline, flying as a Part 121 captain, for less than 40K a year. Try and balance that against your mythical 20-hour, $250K captain. Non-sequitur. That's why UAL is failing and the regionals are sorta prospering. |
#113
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In article , James Robinson
wrote: "A 10-year captain of Boeing 737-200s makes $157,152 at Delta, and $178,152 at United. The most senior captain, with 30 years of experience, flying a Boeing 777 wide-body, makes $248,040 at Delta, and $254,748 at United." You proved my point. Of all the captains at Delta, for example, how many have been there 30 years? And how many are on the 777? Far, far fewer than the entire pilot pool, I assure you. -- Garner R. Miller ATP/CFII/MEI Clifton Park, NY =USA= |
#114
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gatt ) wrote:
: : Are you saying my father isn't "smart"? Are you saying that company : loyalty and hard work isn't smart? : Company loyalty died years ago, with a few rare exceptions, like Malden Mills. The following article contrasts Malden Mills' Aaron Feuerstein with Enron's Ken Lay: http://sitesearch.washingtonpost.com...2001Dec19.html A CEO Who Lives by What's Right (washingtonpost.com) "By Mary McGrory Thursday, December 20, 2001; Page A03 In this anxious hour of pink-slip dread, it is restoring to think of Aaron Feuerstein, a Massachusetts manufacturer who prizes his employees and risks profits on their behalf. The CEO of Malden Mills, located in Lawrence, the 23rd poorest community in the country, stepped clear of the greedy stereotype of his kind in 1995 when, just before Christmas, his factory burned down. Rather than taking the insurance money and retiring or moving the plant to some Third World country, he promptly announced that he would rebuild. He gave bonuses to the help and paid them while they waited for the factory reopening..." --Jerry Leslie Note: is invalid for email |
#115
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Robert M. Gary ) wrote:
: What industry are you referring to? I work in an industry that contains : a lot of H-1 employees (software, telecommunications). There is no : difference in saleries. : : -Robert : http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1014/p17s01-coop.html Endangered species: US programmers | csmonitor.com "Endangered species: US programmers By David R. Francis [snip] Further, the H-1B program, set up in 1990, is flawed, critics charge. For example, employers are not required to recruit Americans before resorting to hiring H-1Bs, says Norman Matloff, a computer science professor at the University of California, Davis. And the requirement that employers pay H-1Bs a "prevailing wage" is useless, he adds, because the law is riddled with loopholes. Nor are even any remaining regulations enforced. The average wage for an American programmer runs about $60,000, says John Bauman, who set up the Organization for the Rights of American Workers. Employers pay H-1Bs an average $53,000..." http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercu...8566322.htm?1c Jobs that stay here -- but not for Americans "Jobs that stay here -- but not for Americans By Karl Schoenberger Mercury News Not all the local jobs disappear when an Indian firm takes a software project to Bangalore. As many as 30 percent in a typical offshoring contract stay onshore, located right on the premises of U.S. technology companies, offshoring experts say. Yet these jobs aren't available to the local workforce. They are reserved, almost exclusively, for guest workers brought from India on H-1B visas by the outsourcing contractors, according to analysts and industry sources. Concerns about the impact of the H-1B program, which raised hackles when it let in legions of foreign tech workers at the peak of the Internet boom, are back again. Hurting from high unemployment after the tech bubble burst and spooked by all the election-year buzz about offshoring, displaced U.S. workers are claiming double jeopardy. ``These jobs never make it to the help-wanted ads or get posted online,'' said Kim Berry, president of the Programmers Guild, a Web-based advocacy group that criticizes offshoring and the H-1B program. The two issues are inseparable, said Ronil Hira, assistant professor of public policy at Rochester Institute of Technology..." --Jerry Leslie Note: is invalid for email |
#116
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Garner Miller wrote:
James Robinson wrote: "A 10-year captain of Boeing 737-200s makes $157,152 at Delta, and $178,152 at United. The most senior captain, with 30 years of experience, flying a Boeing 777 wide-body, makes $248,040 at Delta, and $254,748 at United." You proved my point. Of all the captains at Delta, for example, how many have been there 30 years? And how many are on the 777? Far, far fewer than the entire pilot pool, I assure you. Certainly true, but you also suggested that a six-figure salary was something to be dreaming of, yet a 10-year captain at the majors flying a narrow-body at $150,000 to $175,000 is well into six figures. There would be lots of them around. Considering that only something like the top 13% of all households, (which can include two wage earners) have incomes over $100k a year, that's not too shabby. Only 4% have incomes over $150k. There is also the amount of time actually spent flying. While Southwest pays their pilots something north of $150k a year, plus stock options, they also get about 50% more flight time out of them than the majors: "Southwest gets about 75 hours' stick time a month from its pilots, whereas most major carriers get only 48 to 52 hours," says Neidl. "It makes a huge difference." http://www.boardmember.com/issues/ar...ticle_id=11261 The high wages, restrictive work rules, and generous benefit plans offered by the major airlines just can't compete with the streamlined operations of the lower cost carriers. Further, the suggestion that the wages compensate for being away from home more than 400 hours a month doesn't explain the wages of truckers or railroad employees, who are often away far more than that, yet only make perhaps a third of what a pilot makes. I'm not begrudging the fact that airline pilots make good money, as I'd certainly like to be in their shoes. I'm simply stating that things are really pretty good overall, but that economic reality has come home to roost for the pilots on the major carriers. |
#117
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An interesting discussion of pilot wages and productivity at the major
air carriers: http://www.unisys.com/transportation...orecard__2.htm |
#118
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In article , James Robinson
wrote: You proved my point. Of all the captains at Delta, for example, how many have been there 30 years? And how many are on the 777? Far, far fewer than the entire pilot pool, I assure you. Certainly true, but you also suggested that a six-figure salary was something to be dreaming of, yet a 10-year captain at the majors flying a narrow-body at $150,000 to $175,000 is well into six figures. Of course. But average all the airline pilots, and we don't all makes a quarter-million a year, and that's been my point from the beginning. The media distorts that fact on a regular basis, making us all look like millionaires. I wish! -- Garner R. Miller ATP/CFII/MEI Clifton Park, NY =USA= |
#119
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"Garner Miller" wrote in message ... In article , James Robinson wrote: "A 10-year captain of Boeing 737-200s makes $157,152 at Delta, and $178,152 at United. The most senior captain, with 30 years of experience, flying a Boeing 777 wide-body, makes $248,040 at Delta, and $254,748 at United." You proved my point. Of all the captains at Delta, for example, how many have been there 30 years? And how many are on the 777? Far, far fewer than the entire pilot pool, I assure you. His numbers are a hell of a lot closer than yours were, and he qualified his statements. You just spewed. |
#120
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In article , Matt Barrow
wrote: You proved my point. Of all the captains at Delta, for example, how many have been there 30 years? And how many are on the 777? Far, far fewer than the entire pilot pool, I assure you. His numbers are a hell of a lot closer than yours were, and he qualified his statements. Fine. A first-year pilot at Continental makes $25,900. UPS, $26,200. United, $23,400. At Delta, $43,600. And surprise, Southwest comes out ON TOP in first-year pay, at $44,900. And the 10-year captain at Southwest? $166,000 -- *more* than the 10-year 737 captain at Delta makes. The thousands upon thousands of them on furlough are making exactly $0, so make sure you factor that into your average. That's a very real risk in this industry. Combine that with the mandatory age-60 retirement, and there really aren't that many years where you're making the kind of money you guys keep -- to use your word -- "spewing." You just spewed. As did you. -- Garner R. Miller ATP/CFII/MEI Clifton Park, NY =USA= |
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