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TinFoilhat2 14th October 2019 11:36


Originally Posted by 172_driver (Post 10593621)
That's the unfortunate truth, hence choose your career path wisely.

I really don't understand those posters who think seniority is unfair. You just cannot expect to jump the queue at any major after a couple of years in the low cost business (or elsewhere). Whadya think those FO's who've been in the company for 15+ years would think? Fair?

Who cares what they think.

If you have been a 10 year A320 FO in BA and suddenly go long haul on the 777 but are also due to be upgraded it’s just tough if you lose out because a new joiner comes from KLM with 6000 hours PIC on the 777.

As far as I’m concerned if my family gets on that 777 they have the right to have the experience of that 777 captain of KLM flying them. So does any other family.

I could not give 2 hoots if that offends any FO who has been their 10 years or feels its unfair. If a pilot has the experience the airline has a duty to use it effectively regardless of your idiotic seniority beliefs.

UberPilot 14th October 2019 12:20


Originally Posted by TinFoilhat2 (Post 10594037)
Who cares what they think.

If you have been a 10 year A320 FO in BA and suddenly go long haul on the 777 but are also due to be upgraded it’s just tough if you lose out because a new joiner comes from KLM with 6000 hours PIC on the 777.

As far as I’m concerned if my family gets on that 777 they have the right to have the experience of that 777 captain of KLM flying them. So does any other family.

I could not give 2 hoots if that offends any FO who has been their 10 years or feels its unfair. If a pilot has the experience the airline has a duty to use it effectively regardless of your idiotic seniority beliefs.

How does anyone ever get promoted then if you say experience on type bypasses any seniority or waiting list system?

Sygyzy 14th October 2019 12:22

Seniority
 
Tinfoilhat.

'Who cares what they think'. I could counter that with who cares what you think. This was a most interesting discussion but with an attitude like that you're either a 50 year captain who brooks no argument, or you're management out to screw the rest of the workforce. Neither sounds like a pleasant chap and one I'd avoid trying to converse with.

If you don't even recognise your co-pilot's experience, nor do you care what they think have you considered the safety aspect of those two flying together. Probabaly not but the fact that the captain is a skygod trumps everything - or so you believe.

Please tell us all who you fly for so that we can all take a wide berth of you and your ilk.

S

Daddy Fantastic 14th October 2019 12:31


Originally Posted by Sygyzy (Post 10594076)
Tinfoilhat.

'Who cares what they think'. I could counter that with who cares what you think. This was a most interesting discussion but with an attitude like that you're either a 50 year captain who brooks no argument, or you're management out to screw the rest of the workforce. Neither sounds like a pleasant chap and one I'd avoid trying to converse with.

If you don't even recognise your co-pilot's experience, nor do you care what they think have you considered the safety aspect of those two flying together. Probabaly not but the fact that the captain is a skygod trumps everything - or so you believe.

Please tell us all who you fly for so that we can all take a wide berth of you and your ilk.

S

Go cry in your safe space you little whinger!!

Daddy Fantastic 14th October 2019 12:33


Originally Posted by UberPilot (Post 10594074)


How does anyone ever get promoted then if you say experience on type bypasses any seniority or waiting list system?

It means spots open up everywhere because all pilots are free to come and go to any airline depending on the offer at hand and the package offered. It oens up proper merit based competition for positions and keeps management on their toes knowing they cannot abuse their pilot workforce anymore.

Yorkshire_Pudding 14th October 2019 17:07


have a good friend who was a CPT at a LCC got offered EK FO and BA obviously FO at the same time. Turned EK down was about to call BA and accept and EK offered him CPT salary at EK but going in as FO.
Say again?

172_driver 14th October 2019 18:07

There's a common attribute among those who speak against seniority - they all believe in a free pilot market. Where pilots are competing like merchants, traveling the world selling themselves to the highest bidder. I guess the same brigade get upset about local language requirements as well. It's excluding qualified pilots.

I am not looking for the top money, the biggest aircraft or most exotic layovers. So the argument that I can apply anywhere if I don't like it doesn't apply to me. I don't want to move. I, together with many I know, stood down early command to join an airline where we saw a long term future for ourselves and our families. I spoke to a Turkish captain recently who wanted to come home, but wasn't prepared to take the pay cut starting at the bottom. I didn't say anything, but thought to myself he'd built up too lavish of a lifestyle and wasn't prepared to go for less. I took that cut years ago and now I am reaping what I sowed. And I think that's fair.

UberPilot 14th October 2019 18:20

I think there’s a key misconception amongst pilots concerning how valuable they believe they are to companies. They are valuable in the sense that each company needs 2 pilots to fly each aircraft; other than that there is very little to differentiate one from another. 10000 hours command? Sadly means very little as the 3000 hour FO can statistically do exactly the same job with a statistically proven safety record. If jets were crashing all over the place with such captains, then there would be a valid argument that a more experienced operator is required. We often compare ourselves to surgeons, lawyers, doctors etc; however these are entirely different in the sense that they are not regulated by SOP and individual talent does make a difference. Training aside, sadly experience counts for very little once certain ticks are achieved.

Jumbo2 14th October 2019 18:36


Originally Posted by Daddy Fantastic (Post 10594083)
Go cry in your safe space you little whinger!!

Are you still dreaming of joining BA Daddy Fantastic? You are aware BA is a seniority airline were everything (apart from X-mas work and leave) is based on seniority. Why bother joining, especially onto a long haul fleet were you will stay very junior for at least 5 years, if you are so against seniority based systems?

From the BA recruitment topic:

Originally Posted by Daddy Fantastic (Post 10512993)
For those interested in Long Haul what are the chances of getting straight onto the A350 or A380 as a non type rate DEP? Also if short haul has no class dates until Q1 2020 then what about class dates for Long Haul on any fleet?


Journey Man 14th October 2019 18:47


Originally Posted by TACHO (Post 10591745)
If I recall correctly, when Monarch met its demise Tui pulled a similar PR stunt, I think they took a grand total of around 4 pilots in the end, with experienced captains being declined an interview... DEC was not an option, and nowhere in that article above does it say that the captains being given the opportunity to work for TUI would be employed as Captains.

TUI were advertising for 'pilots' prior to the bankruptcy of Thomas cook and it took more than a precursory glance at the advertisement and terms to realise that they were, in fact, recruiting for FO positions only.

Im going to make a controversial point here. The removal of seniority would benefit the industry greatly, in todays world seniority is little more than 'golden handcuffs' that prevents the movement of experienced pilots and in many cases rewards mediocrity, whilst also allowing an airline to gain experienced guys very cheaply. Without it a pilot could freely sell his skill and experience in search of the highest bidder or airline with the most favourable Ts and Cs, Of course the guys at the top of the list are probably less favourable to this than those languishing in the middle or bottom.. but overall if one was towards the top of the list, that would imply a large measure of experience, which with the demise of seniority would mean you would possess a very marketable quality.

it exists in hardly any other industry, and by maintaining it the pilot community as a whole is maintaining a rod for it's own back that ultimately, aside from 'the few' who happened to be in the right airline at the right time', causes an industry wide 'cap' of terms and conditions.


well said.

SaulGoodman 14th October 2019 18:55

Take your case to the European Labour Authority. But do it before the end of the month! ;)

felixthecat 14th October 2019 19:31


Originally Posted by AIMINGHIGH123 (Post 10594209)
I have a good friend who was a CPT at a LCC got offered EK FO and BA obviously FO at the same time. Turned EK down was about to call BA and accept and EK offered him CPT salary at EK but going in as FO.

I think someone has been pulling your leg...EK would never do that, they don’t need to for a start.

Yorkshire_Pudding 14th October 2019 21:35


Originally Posted by AIMINGHIGH123 (Post 10594423)


It was at least 2 years ago. He wasn’t the only one.

I know the guy very well and it’s all true. Why do they still offer enhanced FO package for certain hours etc?

The enhanced FO salary deal is something completely different to offering a new joiner junior FO a captains salary. Which was it?

felixthecat 15th October 2019 04:40


Originally Posted by AIMINGHIGH123 (Post 10594423)


It was at least 2 years ago. He wasn’t the only one.

I know the guy very well and it’s all true. Why do they still offer enhanced FO package for certain hours etc?

Enhanced FO salary and Captains salary are totally different things and different amounts.
EK have not given FOs Captains packages to get them to join.

The Blu Riband 15th October 2019 11:49


Originally Posted by Daddy Fantastic (Post 10594085)
It means spots open up everywhere because all pilots are free to come and go to any airline depending on the offer at hand and the package offered. It oens up proper merit based competition for positions and keeps management on their toes knowing they cannot abuse their pilot workforce anymore.

Or
it means pilots undercutting each other, getting sacked for minor infractions because management know there's always a pilot willing to work for less. It means pilots would feel obliged to compete in fuel league tables and working more for less reward to jump the queue to avoid losing their jobs, or to to get ahead in the race for promotion.
eg BA requires P1s for the A350 so they go to the market and get the cheapest captains willing to work outside of Bidline rules. The 744 is now overcrewed so they get laid off despite many having been with the company for 10 years.
eg BA starts a new route to an exotic location but are only willing to offer a 1 star hotel and no allowances. Junior guys sacrifice pay and standards in the quest for time on a beach.

How do you determine this "merit" based system? Sim scores, overtime rates, departure times, lowest sickness levels, pilots willing to become trainers for no extra comp?

VinRouge 15th October 2019 12:15

Bottom line is there are no UK Longhaul operators that don’t operate a seniority system. I would suggest that is for a reason.

EI_DVM 15th October 2019 19:42


Originally Posted by The Blu Riband (Post 10594857)
Or
it means pilots undercutting each other, getting sacked for minor infractions because management know there's always a pilot willing to work for less. It means pilots would feel obliged to compete in fuel league tables and working more for less reward to jump the queue to avoid losing their jobs, or to to get ahead in the race for promotion.
eg BA requires P1s for the A350 so they go to the market and get the cheapest captains willing to work outside of Bidline rules. The 744 is now overcrewed so they get laid off despite many having been with the company for 10 years.
eg BA starts a new route to an exotic location but are only willing to offer a 1 star hotel and no allowances. Junior guys sacrifice pay and standards in the quest for time on a beach.

How do you determine this "merit" based system? Sim scores, overtime rates, departure times, lowest sickness levels, pilots willing to become trainers for no extra comp?

+1

This and exactly this is the reason not to do away with seniority, management don't look at pilot performance or ability, as long as you're not actively endangering the aircraft then management don't know who you are, they don't hire/care about good/great pilots, they hire compliant/competent pilots, competent pilots of which there are many, the only names they know are the ones that don't budge on working conditions/T&Cs, who go fatigued, that won't work days off so I don't know how those could argue that this makes for an improvement in working conditions.

Perhaps the case could be made that in a pilots market seniority holds us back, but the majority of the time over the past 30 years it's been an airline's market with an oversupply of pilots happy to outbid and undercut each other, which means seniority protects those of us actually working to our agreements and protecting our T&Cs, calling fatigued when required, not working days off just because a company couldn't plan adequate sick-leave cover, not accepting less when it comes to HOTAC etc.

Let's not kid ourselves, we all know there are better and worse pilots, we all go into work and see folks who shouldn't be there, we go in and see others that put our own skills to shame, there is a variety of skill level but none of that really matters because 99.99% of the time, all that's needed is someone who meets the minimum requirements, who can pass two sim checks a year and a line check, and there's plenty of those out there. There is a place for meritocracy in certain areas, where it comes to training appointments etc, but for the average pilot on the line all that's needed is acceptable levels of competence, which is where seniority excels in providing order and transparency.

hans brinker 15th October 2019 19:51


Originally Posted by The Blu Riband (Post 10594857)
Or
it means pilots undercutting each other, getting sacked for minor infractions because management know there's always a pilot willing to work for less. It means pilots would feel obliged to compete in fuel league tables and working more for less reward to jump the queue to avoid losing their jobs, or to to get ahead in the race for promotion.
eg BA requires P1s for the A350 so they go to the market and get the cheapest captains willing to work outside of Bidline rules. The 744 is now overcrewed so they get laid off despite many having been with the company for 10 years.
eg BA starts a new route to an exotic location but are only willing to offer a 1 star hotel and no allowances. Junior guys sacrifice pay and standards in the quest for time on a beach.

How do you determine this "merit" based system? Sim scores, overtime rates, departure times, lowest sickness levels, pilots willing to become trainers for no extra comp?

Or: Lowest diversion levels, lowest fuel burns (by departing min fuel), lowest level of cancellations due to MX write ups or fatigue calls, it is a VERY big can of worms you open. Seniority is the worst system, except for all the others (W. Churchill)

VariablePitchP 16th October 2019 12:12


Originally Posted by hans brinker (Post 10595192)
Or: Lowest diversion levels, lowest fuel burns (by departing min fuel), lowest level of cancellations due to MX write ups or fatigue calls, it is a VERY big can of worms you open. Seniority is the worst system, except for all the others (W. Churchill)

What you’ve just said has pretty much sealed the seniority argument for me. Not sure if you think what you’re saying is a good or a bad thing though, tone doesn’t really come through in text :O

As an FO, I don’t want to fly with the person who is trying to be at the top of the fuel league table by never taking any extra, who never stops to get the aircraft checked by engineers and doesn’t put in fatigue reports. The person you’ve just described sounds way, way too punchy. That sort of task focused mentality I’m sure works great in the military when there is a genuine mission that must be achieved. It has no place in commercial aviation.

midnight cruiser 16th October 2019 17:36

If you think your captains are so easily corruptible, then you may be more comfortable in a desk job, and also presumably have little faith in managers/training dept to pick a "safe pair of hands", which to put it in a nutshell, is almost invariably the criteria (although I can see that in very very large airlines, it is difficult to form an impression of a crew member, as there are so many).

The most incompetent new captains I have seen, by a mile, were in a seniority airline, where you wait for your number to come up, most people pass the command assessment and almost all eventually pass the course. The sharpest and safest were where most of the trainers were ex Lightnings, out of the blue they would grab Bloggs, telling him,"you're ready get in the sim", about 3 in six pass the assessment, and about 3/4 pass the course.

Stocious 16th October 2019 19:25


where most of the trainers were ex Lightnings
For all its faults and foibles, give me a seniority system over this sort of setup every day of the week!

The Blu Riband 16th October 2019 21:42


Originally Posted by midnight cruiser (Post 10595920)
most of the trainers were ex Lightnings, out of the blue they would grab Bloggs, telling him,"you're ready get in the sim", about 3 in six pass the assessment, and about 3/4 pass the course.

It doesn’t sound like a very professional or equitable method of selection to me!
Especialliy when you then state that only about 30% of those chosen (so randomly) actually pass the course!


172_driver 16th October 2019 22:20


But upgrade to command is something of a side issue - it's main iniquity is the way seniority distorts free movement of labour between companies, favouring those who have stayed at just one company over those who have had to change companies, and for no better reason than that.
Negative! You are free to apply and join any seniority list you like, if that suits your lifestyle. But expect to join at the bottom. There are many of us that have waited for our time for a command slot, long haul, part time, whatever seniority is used for... If you can't take the salary cut or demotion that's a burden you have to carry. Choose your career path wisely.I admit, some fall short on luck for whatever reason, life circumstances, timing in the pilot market, bankruptcies. Still, it would be grossly unfair to undercut those who've waited their time. In my outfit there are 20+ year FO's.

TACHO 16th October 2019 23:20


Originally Posted by 172_driver (Post 10596168)
In my outfit there are 20+ year FO's.

Sounds like a great system.

172_driver 17th October 2019 04:53


Originally Posted by TACHO (Post 10596199)
Sounds like a great system.

Sounds like a place where people want to work.

C195 17th October 2019 08:08


Originally Posted by 172_driver (Post 10596327)
Sounds like a place where people want to work.

SAS is the only real option for a stable jet job in Sweden. A long period in the right seat may be a price worth paying for a stable home base. That said, the time to command should reduce at SAS due to retirements in the coming years.



flyer4life 17th October 2019 08:18


Originally Posted by hans brinker (Post 10595192)
Or: Lowest diversion levels, lowest fuel burns (by departing min fuel), lowest level of cancellations due to MX write ups or fatigue calls, it is a VERY big can of worms you open. Seniority is the worst system, except for all the others (W. Churchill)

Scaremongering. None of this happens at my non-seniority airline and any plans to introduce such nonsense could be easily stopped by a united workforce and a decent union. Also, such an airline would become a crap place to work and, with true free movement of labour, would struggle to maintain staff levels.


Originally Posted by 172_driver (Post 10596168)
There are many of us that have waited for our time for a command slot, long haul, part time, whatever seniority is used for... If you can't take the salary cut or demotion that's a burden you have to carry. Choose your career path wisely.I admit, some fall short on luck for whatever reason, life circumstances, timing in the pilot market, bankruptcies. Still, it would be grossly unfair to undercut those who've waited their time. In my outfit there are 20+ year FO's.

But it’s OK for the gross unfairness of pilots spending 15+ years on a seniority list and having to start again at the bottom because their company went bust? Our companies are run by senior executives who have fundamentally different (and shorter term) incentives to those of pilots on long seniority lists. The executives don’t have to worry about starting at the bottom if it all goes wrong.

It would be interesting to see the true numbers, but considering more companies have folded over time than exist now, it’s a reasonable assumption to say seniority has screwed more of us than it has benefitted.

The future is so unpredictable with many, many unknowns. Trying to plan around a 20 year wait in the queue at one company seems more like an exercise in one’s luck than “choosing wisely”.

TinFoilhat2 17th October 2019 08:28


Originally Posted by The Blu Riband (Post 10594857)
Or
it means pilots undercutting each other, getting sacked for minor infractions because management know there's always a pilot willing to work for less. It means pilots would feel obliged to compete in fuel league tables and working more for less reward to jump the queue to avoid losing their jobs, or to to get ahead in the race for promotion.
eg BA requires P1s for the A350 so they go to the market and get the cheapest captains willing to work outside of Bidline rules. The 744 is now overcrewed so they get laid off despite many having been with the company for 10 years.
eg BA starts a new route to an exotic location but are only willing to offer a 1 star hotel and no allowances. Junior guys sacrifice pay and standards in the quest for time on a beach.

How do you determine this "merit" based system? Sim scores, overtime rates, departure times, lowest sickness levels, pilots willing to become trainers for no extra comp?

Never hear such rubbish in my life, just like remainers with their 'Off a cliff edge' project fear 3.0 nonsense!!

172_driver 17th October 2019 10:05


But it’s OK for the gross unfairness of pilots spending 15+ years on a seniority list and having to start again at the bottom because their company went bust? Our companies are run by senior executives who have fundamentally different (and shorter term) incentives to those of pilots on long seniority lists.
I did acknowledge that there's always a chance of falling short in luck. That could happen in the property market, or an unexpected disease. Really anything. Your bankruptcy is unfortunately something You have to live with, just as I'd have to live with My bankruptcy. Having waited a long time, I am not going to stand down my career opportunities in pity. And I am not expecting you to stand down yours.

deja vu 17th October 2019 10:30

Seniority is not perfect, I just don't know of a better system that is not open to abuse.

NoelEvans 17th October 2019 11:27


Originally Posted by VinRouge (Post 10594877)
Bottom line is there are no UK Longhaul operators that don’t operate a seniority system. I would suggest that is for a reason.

I would argue that that reason is 'inertia'. It is a huge mass not necessarily going the correct way, but too much effort is needed to change its direction. Inertia is often one of the biggest 'obstructions' to improvement.

There are some very entrenched views here. With the extremes of "that is the way it always has been" and "pilots will be able to move equally and freely". Neither are logically valid.

The "first come first served" (let's call it FCFS) system has been mentioned. That would be the same as arriving at a counter to buy something and taking a 'numbered ticket' for your place in queue. For the next thing that you want to buy you get a similar numbered ticket. A base move? Put in your bid and you get your place in the queue. Fleet change? Put in your bid and you get your place in the queue. Command? Meet the criteria then put in your bid and get your place in the queue. As with any queuing system anyone 'arriving' after you is behind you in the queue.

In a seniority system you get that 'numbered ticket' for your place in all of those queues, even for queues that you could never have dreamed would exist, the day that you join the airline. With that 'number' you can change your mind about which queue to join as your whim takes you and 'trump' others who have been in another queue for a long time already with your 'number' and queue-jump towards the head of that queue.

As regards commands, both systems are equally capable of having good systems for meeting the criteria for command or of having 'brown nose' or 'best buddy' systems for 'meeting' that criteria; all that is at question here is which queuing system you use from then on.

As regards Direct Entry Captains, they should be in the equivalent of that FCFS queue. If there are no suitably qualified candidates immediately available for promotion then there is an immediate position at the top of that 'queue' and a DEC position is justified.

I have worked for airlines that have used both systems and for me the straight seniority system is the by far the least preferable.

Seniority lists and final salary pension schemes have always been the shackles that have been hugely detrimental to pilot job mobility. With an airline failure (and they happen irritatingly often and not even 'legacy' airlines are immune) both those shackles shatter the pilots' careers and futures. Final salary pension schemes are now almost gone as one of those shackles and seniority lists need to be the next.

Losing pilots and having to replace them is one of the huge costs of maintaining a pilot force. Seniority lists and final salary schemes have been one of the best tools available to management to block pilot mobility. Without those shackles, terms and conditions will have to be the method of maintaining a stable pilot force. Those terms and conditions are not always just "money, money" but often lifestyle matters like basing options, work patterns, etc. One of the biggest 'legacy' airlines in this country is losing some pilots to one of the biggest LCCs, so pilots are starting to look at more than just the 'headline' terms and conditions.

Seniority list systems are on the start of the way out, but due to that huge inertia it is going to take a long time. Airline failures have been one of the biggest 'culls' of seniority lists as the last two to fail used seniority lists. But in doing so they have highlighted the serious shortcomings of that system. Seniority lists, like final salary pension schemes, are going to disappear from pilots' employment conditions. Seniority lists are going to take a bit longer to go.

About the "20 year FOs", I have know someone who retired from a "seniority list airline" as an FO by choice and entirely due to that seniority list: as a very senior FO he was near the top of the FO 'list' and could ensure a good lifestyle and acceptable earnings; if he was promoted he would be at the bottom of the Captain 'list' with a crappy lifestyle and hardly improved earnings. So, because of the seniority list he chose to remain an FO up to his retirement. So don't blindly quote "20 year FOs" to 'support' seniority lists!!

TACHO 17th October 2019 11:40


Originally Posted by NoelEvans (Post 10596620)
I would argue that that reason is 'inertia'. It is a huge mass not necessarily going the correct way, but too much effort is needed to change its direction. Inertia is often one of the biggest 'obstructions' to improvement.

There are some very entrenched views here. With the extremes of "that is the way it always has been" and "pilots will be able to move equally and freely". Neither are logically valid.

The "first come first served" (let's call it FCFS) system has been mentioned. That would be the same as arriving at a counter to buy something and taking a 'numbered ticket' for your place in queue. For the next thing that you want to buy you get a similar numbered ticket. A base move? Put in your bid and you get your place in the queue. Fleet change? Put in your bid and you get your place in the queue. Command? Meet the criteria then put in your bid and get your place in the queue. As with any queuing system anyone 'arriving' after you is behind you in the queue.

In a seniority system you get that 'numbered ticket' for your place in all of those queues, even for queues that you could never have dreamed would exist, the day that you join the airline. With that 'number' you can change your mind about which queue to join as your whim takes you and 'trump' others who have been in another queue for a long time already with your 'number' and queue-jump towards the head of that queue.

As regards commands, both systems are equally capable of having good systems for meeting the criteria for command or of having 'brown nose' or 'best buddy' systems for 'meeting' that criteria; all that is at question here is which queuing system you use from then on.

As regards Direct Entry Captains, they should be in the equivalent of that FCFS queue. If there are no suitably qualified candidates immediately available for promotion then there is an immediate position at the top of that 'queue' and a DEC position is justified.

I have worked for airlines that have used both systems and for me the straight seniority system is the by far the least preferable.

Seniority lists and final salary pension schemes have always been the shackles that have been hugely detrimental to pilot job mobility. With an airline failure (and they happen irritatingly often and not even 'legacy' airlines are immune) both those shackles shatter the pilots' careers and futures. Final salary pension schemes are now almost gone as one of those shackles and seniority lists need to be the next.

Losing pilots and having to replace them is one of the huge costs of maintaining a pilot force. Seniority lists and final salary schemes have been one of the best tools available to management to block pilot mobility. Without those shackles, terms and conditions will have to be the method of maintaining a stable pilot force. Those terms and conditions are not always just "money, money" but often lifestyle matters like basing options, work patterns, etc. One of the biggest 'legacy' airlines in this country is losing some pilots to one of the biggest LCCs, so pilots are starting to look at more than just the 'headline' terms and conditions.

Seniority list systems are on the start of the way out, but due to that huge inertia it is going to take a long time. Airline failures have been one of the biggest 'culls' of seniority lists as the last two to fail used seniority lists. But in doing so they have highlighted the serious shortcomings of that system. Seniority lists, like final salary pension schemes, are going to disappear from pilots' employment conditions. Seniority lists are going to take a bit longer to go.

About the "20 year FOs", I have know someone who retired from a "seniority list airline" as an FO by choice and entirely due to that seniority list: as a very senior FO he was near the top of the FO 'list' and could ensure a good lifestyle and acceptable earnings; if he was promoted he would be at the bottom of the Captain 'list' with a crappy lifestyle and hardly improved earnings. So, because of the seniority list he chose to remain an FO up to his retirement. So don't blindly quote "20 year FOs" to 'support' seniority lists!!

one of the most reasoned and articulate posts here, talks sense

3Greens 17th October 2019 11:58


Originally Posted by TACHO (Post 10596628)
one of the most reasoned and articulate posts here, talks sense

ahhh but threat 20 year FO was a direct beniciary of seniority, in that his lifestyle as that senior FO was so good because he was so senior on his status list.

hans brinker 17th October 2019 13:22


Originally Posted by VariablePitchP (Post 10595654)


What you’ve just said has pretty much sealed the seniority argument for me. Not sure if you think what you’re saying is a good or a bad thing though, tone doesn’t really come through in text :O

As an FO, I don’t want to fly with the person who is trying to be at the top of the fuel league table by never taking any extra, who never stops to get the aircraft checked by engineers and doesn’t put in fatigue reports. The person you’ve just described sounds way, way too punchy. That sort of task focused mentality I’m sure works great in the military when there is a genuine mission that must be achieved. It has no place in commercial aviation.

don’t worry, I’m firmly on the seniority first side

hans brinker 17th October 2019 13:23


Originally Posted by flyer4life (Post 10596424)


Scaremongering. None of this happens at my non-seniority airline and any plans to introduce such nonsense could be easily stopped by a united workforce and a decent union. Also, such an airline would become a crap place to work and, with true free movement of labour, would struggle to maintain staff levels.



But it’s OK for the gross unfairness of pilots spending 15+ years on a seniority list and having to start again at the bottom because their company went bust? Our companies are run by senior executives who have fundamentally different (and shorter term) incentives to those of pilots on long seniority lists. The executives don’t have to worry about starting at the bottom if it all goes wrong.

It would be interesting to see the true numbers, but considering more companies have folded over time than exist now, it’s a reasonable assumption to say seniority has screwed more of us than it has benefitted.

The future is so unpredictable with many, many unknowns. Trying to plan around a 20 year wait in the queue at one company seems more like an exercise in one’s luck than “choosing wisely”.

I honestly have no clue how you can have a Union, but not seniority. As far as the eternal “is it fair” argument: Maybe not, but it definitely isn’t fair for those in a well run company waiting for their upgrade to by be bypassed by people that took the early upgrade in a dodgy company.

NoelEvans 18th October 2019 09:04


Originally Posted by 3Greens (Post 10596654)

ahhh but threat 20 year FO was a direct beniciary of seniority, in that his lifestyle as that senior FO was so good because he was so senior on his status list.

An amusing attempt to "snatch victory from the jaws of defeat" on the seniority argument: a 'beneficiary' of seniority when it was exactly that seniority situation that stifled his opportunities for promotion? Nice try!


Originally Posted by hans brinker (Post 10596722)


I honestly have no clue how you can have a Union, but not seniority. ...

easyJet has active union involvement and does not use seniority.


Originally Posted by hans brinker (Post 10596722)
... As far as the eternal “is it fair” argument: Maybe not, but it definitely isn’t fair for those in a well run company waiting for their upgrade to by be bypassed by people that took the early upgrade in a dodgy company.

​​​​From the easyJet recruiting website:

Minimum criteria:
– Type Rated Captains: minimum 4000 flying hours with 1000 PIC hours
– Non Type Rated Captains: minimum 4000 flying hours with 1000 PIC hours on jet aircraft over 30T MTOW
I would like to hear the response from those ex-Monarch captains who got jobs in easyJet after their airline went bust as I would like to hear the same comments from ex-Thomas Cook captains looking for jobs there when you imply that they might have

[taken] the early upgrade in a dodgy company.

flyer4life 18th October 2019 09:23

Exactly NoelEvans, I was one who took “a dodgy upgrade” at Monarch, thinking I was comfortably at a career airline with the cushion of seniority.

And then I joined EZY as DEC where we have unions across Europe without seniority, although there is an element of pay based on length of service. Great to stay LHS of course, shame to lose the career option of long haul at my old airline.

For those outside of UK, Monarch was a seniority airline that lasted for almost 50 years, until a combination of events and a take-over by venture capitalists brought about its demise. Not long ago, when many of us made our career choices, it was considered a very secure, career airline. It had a superb safety record and a reputation for high standards, nothing dodgy about it at all.

I think a lot of guys just don’t understand the unfortunate situations that can occur outside of their own seniority bubble. My point is that seniority punishes decisions you made years ago when you simply cannot predict the future. It’s mostly down to luck and it could happen to any of us. It’s naïve to think otherwise.

I think to have more career choices later in life outside of dumb seniority is of great benefit if one’s luck doesn’t hold out for decades on a seniority list. I thought we pilots liked to have options?

deja vu 18th October 2019 09:36

Whinge, moan, it's not fair, boo hoo. Certainly doesn't sound like professional pilots, more like a bunch of school kids. No wonder the status of pilots has dropped to that of glorified bus drivers. What you are mostly saying is whatever system suits me right now is fine.

flyer4life 18th October 2019 09:39

Yes, seniority is very much like school. “I’ve been here longer than you so I am better”.

:E

deja vu 18th October 2019 09:44


Originally Posted by flyer4life (Post 10597402)
Yes, seniority is very much like school. “I’ve been here longer than you so I am better”.

:E

Exhibit A...I rest my case me lud!


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