DEP at Ryanair
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: England
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I applied for the DEC, but for a perm contract only. Have had an agency phone and email me ever since, asking if i'd like to give up my full time contract to become an agency worker in southern Italy.
Errrmmm no.
Errrmmm no.
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: FL450
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Hey guys, does anyone know If Brookfield are still issuing new contracts on behalf of Ryanair. And if not does anyone know why? Are there any other new recruitment agencies involved with Ryan? Thought this was the best place to pose the question due to the large amount of experienced Ryan guys here, if not my apologies. Thanks and safe flying
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: UK
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I don't think Brookfield are taking any more - promotions are onto permanent staff RYR cntracts and they are trying to move FOs over as well. I could speculate as to why, but may end up writing one of those "I have made a donation to charity" posts for doing so. However, we have all seen the various things happening across the EU to Brookfield pilots in RYR.
I think there are still contracts being opened up with Storm McGinley.
I think there are still contracts being opened up with Storm McGinley.
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: FL450
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Thanks for the quick reply Aluminium shuffler. I have googled a few headlines re Brookfield and Ryanair, I see what you mean. However do Storm treat their guys better? Is it due to Brookfield management or a falling out with pilots? All just my own humble opinion of coarse.
Join Date: Jan 2008
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yes if you are a contractor 4.50 euro will be deducted from your hourly scheduled block hour.
just better not to even think about it.
you get nothing for free in Ryanair. Not even a lanyard for the ID you pay for
just better not to even think about it.
you get nothing for free in Ryanair. Not even a lanyard for the ID you pay for
Join Date: Sep 2013
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To clarify, CONTRACTORS pay for recurrent training, but employed staff do not. They do tend to nick a day off "for training purposes" each time you're in the sim, presumably because the management believe it's just like playing the X-Boxes that the IT department seem to spend far too much time on.
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: FL410
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Ryanair contract - €0/£0
Provider contract as per provider agreement, fixed amount per hour earned and fixed amount per hour for training costs, covering your entire training requirements on an annual basis to maintain currency for the airline (ground school, simulator, fire training,...).
Provider contract as per provider agreement, fixed amount per hour earned and fixed amount per hour for training costs, covering your entire training requirements on an annual basis to maintain currency for the airline (ground school, simulator, fire training,...).
Join Date: Jan 2008
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CP35- as above RYR contract deduct nothing, the agency deducts €4.50 per hour worked, so even if you do 1 hour you will pay 4.50 or the full 900, so it varies on how much you fly, no set rate per month or per year, hope that helps
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: in a dirty cockpit
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Hi guys,
just a question about the IAA license.
I hold a EASA PART FCL - ATPL. Moving to Ryanair you have to transfer your License to Ireland and obtain a IAA License. They collect your EASA and give you the irish one (you can't hold 2 EU License at the same time).
If, one day, you want to apply to another airline how does it work? Are you considered a EASA holder or it is a single case to be evaluated by the recruitment team?
Usually, the European carrier's job posts are like:
JAR FCL or EASA PART FCL License
XXX Total Flight time
YYY on type
etc.
I cannot imagine that Ryanair's pilots are not eligible for screenings, rather they are always around doing assessments
PS: obviously, in case you want to go back to EASA you can't use the IAA for flying and have obtained an EASA as well, as they collect your License to deliver the new one. So at the time you apply for an airline and you are still flying with ryan, you just have the IAA.
just a question about the IAA license.
I hold a EASA PART FCL - ATPL. Moving to Ryanair you have to transfer your License to Ireland and obtain a IAA License. They collect your EASA and give you the irish one (you can't hold 2 EU License at the same time).
If, one day, you want to apply to another airline how does it work? Are you considered a EASA holder or it is a single case to be evaluated by the recruitment team?
Usually, the European carrier's job posts are like:
JAR FCL or EASA PART FCL License
XXX Total Flight time
YYY on type
etc.
I cannot imagine that Ryanair's pilots are not eligible for screenings, rather they are always around doing assessments
PS: obviously, in case you want to go back to EASA you can't use the IAA for flying and have obtained an EASA as well, as they collect your License to deliver the new one. So at the time you apply for an airline and you are still flying with ryan, you just have the IAA.
Join Date: Mar 2013
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Changing your state of licence issue (SOLI - You'll get to know this term if ever doing it to the UK) to Ireland will not give you an IAA national licence, it will give you an IAA issued EASA licence. This is the problem with the 2 licences thing, because I *think* it IS actually possible to keep a national licence in one country and hold an EASA licence in another... I am not 100% sure about this but it is not relevant.
What it means in the end is that you aren't CONSIDERED to be an EASA licence holder, you actually ARE one, the same as before. It will just be administered by a different country/authority.
In theory Ryanair should have no reason to ask you to change your state of licence issue to Ireland. I believe that the only practical reason they does is that most/all their TRE's are under the IAA and thus would (again, this is what I am led to believe I am not 100%) require a briefing from the UK CAA/other authority in order to conduct LST's etc for a non IAA licence holder.
What it means in the end is that you aren't CONSIDERED to be an EASA licence holder, you actually ARE one, the same as before. It will just be administered by a different country/authority.
In theory Ryanair should have no reason to ask you to change your state of licence issue to Ireland. I believe that the only practical reason they does is that most/all their TRE's are under the IAA and thus would (again, this is what I am led to believe I am not 100%) require a briefing from the UK CAA/other authority in order to conduct LST's etc for a non IAA licence holder.