The wife unit says we're not moving anywhere...and I'm not commutable [at this time].Move to Atlanta?
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The wife unit says we're not moving anywhere...and I'm not commutable [at this time].Move to Atlanta?
As someone newly switching up to the Airlines... who plans to commute, and recognizes it sucks... why are you "not commutable [at this time]?"The wife unit says we're not moving anywhere...and I'm not commutable [at this time].
I don't want to commute...that's all. Luckily, our base [CVG] will stay open for another 3 years...if [when] it closes at that time, I'll be commutable.As someone newly switching up to the Airlines... who plans to commute, and recognizes it sucks... why are you "not commutable [at this time]?"
Also, congrats!As someone newly switching up to the Airlines... who plans to commute, and recognizes it sucks... why are you "not commutable [at this time]?"
Also, congrats!As someone newly switching up to the Airlines... who plans to commute, and recognizes it sucks... why are you "not commutable [at this time]?"
Just as an FYI. I was at a mil to civilian hiring seminar yesterday. Speaking with a few of the regional recruiters two more companies, both owned by AA, are going to begin a rotary transition program. Piedmont and PSA, with PSA rolling theirs out in the next week or so and Piedmont by the end of this quarter. It seems they're seeing this group of pilots only missing the 250 fixed wing requirement and trying to jump on it. So, things are looking up for us rotorheads trying to go to "The Show."
I will be all in on this in about 3 years. That is the plan. Just inside of four years before I can retire. Going to try and get orders to Corpus Christi to be a VT Instructor on the back side of my current assignment in order to slay some FW hours for my final two years. Currently sitting at 3200 with all but about 150 being in RW. I assume I should start the process for the transition about a year out from retirement.
When it comes to referrals, An AA wholly Owned Regional employee may refer a pilot applicant to their respective company and a Mainline AA employee can refer a pilot applicant to all three of the Wholly Owned Regionals.
There are now several AWers employed within the American Airlines Group (Mainline AA and the 3 WO regionals), so there is no reason that anyone interested in these companies can't make their applicant process easier by talking to someone in the system, and getting referred if they decide to pursue it.
My application process was made much easier by a buddy from flight school who is a mainline AA employee write a referral for me and follow up with an email to someone he knew in the hiring food chain so I would be more than willing to educate interested folks about Piedmont and refer them if they wish to apply.
Would one be better off doing ~two more years with a FTS VR/VTP gig, or retiring and jumping into a RTP right at 20? Could you check all the boxes for an airline hire in a three-year fixed-wing FTS tour? Is there any seniority to be gained by starting earlier at a regional in a RTP? If pay difference between regional and FTS FW tour wasn’t a big concern, what would the better option be?
Don't regional guys still get a number at a major carrier that may own them? I had lots of copilots from Eagle that had gotten a number years before.Going to a regional won’t get you seniority early at a major
Don't regional guys still get a number at a major carrier that may own them? I had lots of copilots from Eagle that had gotten a number years before.