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EasyJet to create 330 pilot jobs

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Old 9th Feb 2013, 09:28
  #81 (permalink)  
 
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I agree that a US style 1500 hrs limit would slow the que of people ready to pay for a rhs. Force a raising of conditions.

I also agree that the only way this will happen will be via a major accident.
I hope it never happens!
I know it is possible for anyone to make a mistake, but I am also aware of several major cadet led incidents, ie, they just didn't have the experience or knowledge to avoid a relatively simple and obvious error.

I used to work for a company whose training captains said that the company was scared the most at the prospect of a major accident. It would simply be the end of the company.
Unfortunately since then the skill standards have fallen with the introduction of the MPL. Mistakes have already been made by these volunteers. Computer skills and enthusiasm are ok but there is a major lack of aircraft handling skills. That came from the training captains too.
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 10:45
  #82 (permalink)  
 
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I was under the impression that the Insurance Companies had some say in the minimum qualification/experience levels of pilot employees. Surely the growing influx of inexperienced/partially trained cadets is a bit like replacing a Micra with a Ferrari and failing to inform Admiral!
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 11:22
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I think the insurance goes off the captains hours. I could be wrong
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 13:31
  #84 (permalink)  
 
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I think the insurance goes off the captains hours. I could be wrong
I think you are right Guy, but when phrases like "one man band" and "accidents waiting to happen" are being bandied around it's about time Insurance Companies took another look at their risks.

Last edited by brakedwell; 9th Feb 2013 at 14:45.
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 14:36
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'Is there a way we can get all UK pilots to sign a petition requesting that this is what the CAA should do?'

Of course it's possible by the means of a strong, united union that represents ALL commercial pilots - not a mamby-pamby 'association' that represents certain vestige interests, which has never and never will have any intention of growing any teeth to further the T&Cs of the UK's professional pilots.

A union that goes to the employers en masse, promising that if nothng gets done about P2F and T&Cs, the entire UK airline industry stops on Monday morning, is the only way anything will change.

It will, of course, not happen and it is why these pages will continue to be filled by those bemoaning the current, sinking situation in which this profession finds itself, and prepared to do nothing about it.

It is only the bottom line that the accountants and managers of the airline businesses understand at that is where any action has to hit, and hit hard.
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 14:56
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But the FAA acted without the pressure of any pilot association. It was decision based on safety. Their industry was in the same shape as ours, maybe a little worse but now the FAA are bragging that their pilots "are the most qualified and best trained in the world"!
So, they had fatal accidents one might argue but, as I said previous its better to learn from someone else's mistakes. Especially if that mistake is 100 fatalities!!!
I hope the CAA read these threads. Come on CAA show some backbone and stop being pressured by airline management.
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 16:36
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The problem is the USA has the General Aviation infrastructure to allow their pilots to gain 1500hrs before sitting in an airliner. I am not sure the UK has that level of backbone in the GA sector to support it. I would be happy to see the magic number of 700hrs return, that's a start at least.
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Old 9th Feb 2013, 16:57
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While I agree with the above and would like to see like most of you a model where experience is more rewarded, I think we might wait a long time before seeing the CAA doing something (they are to busy converting licences to EASA!).
Before trying to change the whole industry, we should aim to maintain/improve our own T&Cs in our own airline.
It should not be possible to decrease salaries and remove benefits such as fixed rosters when the airline is highly profitable.
Are the new UK contracts been made in correlation with BALPA?
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Old 10th Feb 2013, 07:43
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I would like to see something like a 700hr requirement and mix of where the operator can recruit from, with jobs bring advertised.

I went and got some experience in GA which is AOC piston work, write / update our manuals with my boss and know the regs etc. also doing I.T systems and software development.

All of this unpaid, whilst holding a day job down, to build a file to take to airline interview with recommendations and sell my I.T skills.

Trained modular, no debt. 4 years applying, writing letters to airlines etc most weeks.

CTC are a road block for all in similar position to what I described above and actually I realised going off and doing the above, has not helped. But i have got a good grounding that I otherwise wouldn't have had.

The jobs are not advertised as CTC have contracts with the likes of EZY and a large number of other operators to feed in their flexi crew cadets from flight school in.

It would be fair if the low hour experienced job was advertised. All could apply directly, against base requirements with level playing field. This would mean the CTC cadet would also have to apply at the end of training. This will never happen, especially with the MPL being around, that requires partner airlines. I would like BALPA and specifically the regulators to step up and do as much as they can to change things in this area and the T&C's. Then maybe I would have a chance of getting an interview

Last edited by turbine100; 10th Feb 2013 at 07:47.
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Old 10th Feb 2013, 14:00
  #90 (permalink)  
 
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turbine100, a reminder (in case you've forgotten) that this is a capitalist Europe. CTC's (and PARC's) monopoly of UK pilot recruitment is a direct result of old and accomplished former Airline Pilots becoming management blood suckers and creating recruitment systems which pocket them every penny in a market absolutely full of young 20 some things who want to fly a jet. It's the same in any industry and within most big corps. Those who become in charge will suck those at the bottom dry and nothing (not even the law or regulation) can stop them. It matters not a shred who gets affected by their decisions.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 07:32
  #91 (permalink)  
 
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GEKO:

Although there were negotiations, the current new entrant contract is a unilateral move by Easyjet and is now the subject of a 'failure to agree' process.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 18:49
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Superpilot

Generally I agree with you.

You dont need to remind me. My proper career of I.T which happens to be a global role in which I travel a lot, I see exactly how businesses work globally.

Exception being that my own proper industry of I.T is not as screwed up as aviation when it comes to recruitment. We dont pay to attend interviews or training courses. And as you mentioned, people in aviation trying to get in are taken advantage of.

Last edited by turbine100; 11th Feb 2013 at 18:53.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 20:16
  #93 (permalink)  
 
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Whilst I agree that it is an injustice that modular pilots get such a rough deal. Integrated courses do provide the airline with something that you cannot offer. You mention your 700 hours which is a nice number and obviously you have decent experience now, problem is the airline has no idea how that experience came about. They don't have any information about how many lessons it took for you to go solo, they cant see which areas of training you struggled in (obviously you may indeed have the perfect record - but they are none the wiser).

On the otherhand, the airline can see all of this information about the integrated cadet. As an ex-integrated cadet, we were under immense pressure throughout training to pass each detail first time, if we failed just one lesson, there would be a review procedure which would examine how to proceed. This may be a simple rerun of the lesson, or perhaps a re-training package or at worst, removal from the program. All of this will go into your final report and will have an impact on what airlines think of you and whether they will indeed take you. 2 first time passes just simply isn't enough information.

Throughout the training, nothing concerns the cadets anything more than what may get written down in their final report. We are absolutely expected to do everything in the minimum hours. Imagine if modular cadets were told they must complete the PPL in 45 hours or else they would never get employed with an airline. The pressure would be enormous.

Sorry if that is a hard pill to swallow but it is the reason why the airlines favour the cadets over the modular students, they are a known quantity. Rather than the students abilities (as everyone has the piece of paper that says they can instrument fly a multi-engine aircraft to a professional standard), rather the information they can gain about them - the knowledge they have had training discipline drilled into them from the start through a culture of fear, of failure and 'review' - that allows them to make an easier decision.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 20:59
  #94 (permalink)  
 
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but it is the reason why the airlines favour the cadets over the modular
students, they are a known quantity
Nope, it is because you guys are willing to fly for peanuts, pay all your training cost and accept a pay deal only a fraction of what was the industry standard only a little while ago.

The airline does not care that you are a cadet or modular, they just found a willing pariticipant to use you as a pawn to erode the T&C's for a generation.

I pity you, just don't come here 5 years from now when you are on 30K flying the left seat working your butt of complaining here how sh!t the industry has become.

Your argument does not hold water, if you guys were that good, why do you get paid 20K less a year compared to non cadets?

The only reason you guys are there is because you are cheaper and you are willing to prostitute yourself for a flying apprenticeship, I won't even call it a job. The only reason you have lasted as long is that some senior crewmembers/trainers are participating in this scam.

You are going to look back when you are looking to buy a house and start a family and you will realise that you can't as you yourself have been responsible for destroying a good career.

Well done, the sad bit is, there are hundreds like you waiting to undercut our terms, fly for free, pay for their own training just to get into that right seat.

Last edited by cldrvr; 11th Feb 2013 at 21:14.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 21:13
  #95 (permalink)  
 
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Misterman, that's bullsh*t!

Explain to me then why dozens of extremely well trained military pilots with thousands of hours and a detailed training record you could only dream of from the likes of CTC etc, are overlooked for 250hour integrated course ab initios???

It's the incestuous relationship between training school and loco carrier and the fact that ex mil aren't stupid enough to be pushed around by loco airlines for sh*t money and no T&CSs. The locos know that when you have a £100,000 debt to honour you'll take anything they offer you. I'm sorry if I offend any integrated flexicrew but the "pressure" misterman talks about, multiply that by 10 and you'll understand what ex mil pilots have all experienced. Plus they are trained officers and used to being managers.

I know an ex mil pilot, thousands of hours, both Fast Jet and ME, who even offered to pay for his own TR with CTC but was told "we only take ab initios with no experience." Now, why would that be?
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 21:39
  #96 (permalink)  
 
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The Wannabe Zombie Army are unstoppable, cannot be reasoned with and they are legion every year.

The consequences are predictable and observable.

They blame the system.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 22:02
  #97 (permalink)  
 
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The military aircrew argument is difficult (I am ex-mil myself). A substantial number of easyJet's trainers are ex-military and that would tell its own story in terms of their basic competence. However, for years military pilots walked into the top jobs and a number did themselves no favours by pouring scorn on those pilots who had never flown in the military and 'only' had commercial experience. Sadly, some formed an almost masonic relationship with their fellow ex-military colleagues and all the top jobs went to their mates. There is no doubt they are on the whole very capable people, but times have changed and it is now incredibly difficult for an ex-military pilot to gain employment in the civil world. This is a temporary blip, and I believe that in the next year or two a more equitable situation will arise. Nonetheless, I do not foresee a return to the 'old days' with jobs for the boys. What I do see is that ex-military pilots will have to pay for type ratings like everyone else and pay some serious money to get their feet on the ladder. What is clearly ludicrous is the current situation of taking countless young and inexperienced pilots who can barely land the aircraft instead of a wider recruitment policy embracing the best of all parts of the industry.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 22:04
  #98 (permalink)  
 
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Misterman, I so disagree about integrated pilots being better, this is just the brain washing they tell you. I am from the modular route funded and paid for by myself. I didn't go for the integrated because I wanted to work and pay for my licence. I attended very good schools all within a 2 year period, first time passes on everything. You can prove to any employer about your training, ie hours and pass record. I work for a major airline as a captain and see both modular and integrated FOs join. You cannot hand on heart tell them apart, there are good and bad from both sides.

The only reason easyjet etc take integrated pilots form CTC is because they can be exploited. Who in their right mind would take on a £100,000 loan in order to get a unsecured job on less that £20,000? Baffles me. It's about time the caa and balpa sort this exploitation of pilots out. Experience counts for nothing now and I can see in the next decade pilots being paid less that bus drivers unless people act now.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 22:22
  #99 (permalink)  
 
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Just to provide a bit of balance here, I don't doubt that most ex military pilots are highly capable and very switched on. That said, some of the most difficult, headstrong, awkward people I have ever flown with are ex military. Some of them just seem unable to let go of their military ways and run the day essentially as a single pilot operation with little or no CRM on display. I can think of a few choice examples in the easyjet training department which were notorious amongst the first officer community whilst I was there.

Flown with some absolutely fab ex mil people too of course. Point is, just because you flew a fast jet once upon a time doesn't mean you'll be well suited to a multi crew commercial operation.

Surely it's the same for integrated/modular. You'll get good and bad from both... Unfortunately however the one thing you can't escape is that these days your chances of employment with the major airlines are greater if you choose to go integrated.
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Old 11th Feb 2013, 22:49
  #100 (permalink)  
 
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I feel people may have missed my point somewhat. Everyone seems to have read that post as if I was saying integrated cadets were better pilots than modular students. I urge you to re-read this and perhaps it will become apparent that this is not what I meant. Just to emphasise the point about the training record and its merits over what is likely to be a fairly sporadic report from other flying schools (although I am assuming this).

I wasn't comparing the training records of ex-mil pilots to those of integrated cadets just simply to the low houred GA pilots. My post was simply addressing that of turbines directly. I agree it is an unfair situation and I have been lucky.

I perhaps worded it badly, I won't edit my original post as I have seen on here how that allows people to change their arguments casually. Perhaps I should have said that this was 'one of the reasons'.

It is indeed a shame some are willing to work for peanuts but others have put plenty of input into this argument so will leave that to others.

If anything, I don't give a good view of the integrated schools - rather them being a place where people fear to maintain their perfect records or risk the waste of the premium paid to join such a course.

I am sure the majority would have enjoyed the training more doing it differently, the reality is that many cadets will have often found it a bit of a chore.
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