Air Canada Pay
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Air Canada Pay
I know this has been discussed but I'd like to know what the take home pay looks like - i.e. during training and once on line starting out. Thanks.
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Flightlevels
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The Hammer
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Three Holer
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Future Embittered Captains?!?!? I hope not...
Geez...what happen to the days where - pretty much anyone of us were willing to fly for free ...or food (And I am NOT meaning to suggest we should, quite the contrary!) I just wonder where that kind of enthusiam has gone for so many of us who are so close to finally realizing 'The Dream' we had when we first started this flying gig?!?!? Just food for thought..take it or leave it...
"I just wonder where that kind of enthusiam has gone for so many of us who are so close to finally realizing 'The Dream' we had when we first started this flying gig?!?!? Just food for thought..take it or leave it"
... 10 years in this industry has taken some of the shine out of the dream. Reality is setting in, and working for peanuts is getting harder and harder to swallow. At least I can make the jump now, but with a family on a single income, it must be a bitch.
Cheers.
... 10 years in this industry has taken some of the shine out of the dream. Reality is setting in, and working for peanuts is getting harder and harder to swallow. At least I can make the jump now, but with a family on a single income, it must be a bitch.
Cheers.
The feet you step on today might be attached to the ass you're kissing tomorrow.
Chase lifestyle not metal.
Chase lifestyle not metal.
I don't live in Toronto, but I find the money for the RS at Jazz is more than enought to raise my family. (I do live cheaply though). I'm finding I'm making as much as I was before I left ($50K) with all the perdiems, shoe allowances, etc. I pay much less taxes, and the tax free per diems make up for it. No regrets what so ever.
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metal overcast
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- Hadji Ramjet
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What was this "dream" of which you so fondly speak? Was it really to fly, or merely to work for a major carrier where you could bid such that you can make as much money as you can while flying as little as you can? There's lots of opportunities to fly, if that's the "dream." Two tents over is a fellow who started flying in Vietnam, turned in his commission as a Major to reup as a Warrant to stay in the cockpit, has been flying ever since. There's not a single military rotary pilot in Canada, and precious few in America, with his experience, he's still living his "dream" and will be until they kick him out or he craters. Sacrifice? Oh wow, talk to the "RJ" pilots who do 24 hour sorties with ACs who make less than some Air Canada FOs. Or the Dragon Lady drivers doing 300 days a year away from home, and wouldn't trade you in a second.
Is your "dream" to make money, or to fly? They might be mutually exclusive objectives.
Is your "dream" to make money, or to fly? They might be mutually exclusive objectives.
Bede,
Thanks for that info - I bet there's lots of people who will be heartened to hear comments like yours. I had put crayon to paper and figured out some scenarios prior to accepting the job and it's good to hear it should work out.
About "the dream". I don't know what motivates other people to fly but I think it's a ton of fun. Sometimes the lifestyle stinks, sometimes the plane stinks and sometimes the money stinks - heck, sometimes everything stinks. I think the shine comes off many things in life as one goes through it. The things that attracted you to your version of "the dream" still exist though - ya just gotta pay attention during the times when they show up. Obviously they're different things for Hadji, for KAG and for everyone else and that's okay.
Keep your head up and pay attention for what
you like about the career. Might find that the dream shines up pretty good sometimes.
Cheers
Thanks for that info - I bet there's lots of people who will be heartened to hear comments like yours. I had put crayon to paper and figured out some scenarios prior to accepting the job and it's good to hear it should work out.
About "the dream". I don't know what motivates other people to fly but I think it's a ton of fun. Sometimes the lifestyle stinks, sometimes the plane stinks and sometimes the money stinks - heck, sometimes everything stinks. I think the shine comes off many things in life as one goes through it. The things that attracted you to your version of "the dream" still exist though - ya just gotta pay attention during the times when they show up. Obviously they're different things for Hadji, for KAG and for everyone else and that's okay.
Keep your head up and pay attention for what
you like about the career. Might find that the dream shines up pretty good sometimes.
Cheers
Bede, what base do you fly out of? What are your houseing costs?
Don't get me wrong I still love flying, couldn't see me doing anything else, and I certinally didnt become a pilot to get rich. I got used to a decent paycheck and my lifestyle reflected it. Going back in pay is going to hurt, but short term pain, long term gain. I guess im gonna have to learn to budget better...
Cheers.
Don't get me wrong I still love flying, couldn't see me doing anything else, and I certinally didnt become a pilot to get rich. I got used to a decent paycheck and my lifestyle reflected it. Going back in pay is going to hurt, but short term pain, long term gain. I guess im gonna have to learn to budget better...
Cheers.
The feet you step on today might be attached to the ass you're kissing tomorrow.
Chase lifestyle not metal.
Chase lifestyle not metal.
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flyboy1234
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Lost in Saigon
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You do get perdiems on the EMJ.
But as on any aircraft at Air Canada, when they board a crew meal for you, you are NOT paid.
EMJ's have no ovens so you don't get a hot meal. On any other aircraft you would be able to claim a meal perdiem if there was not hotmeal.
BUT, ACAP agreed to cold meals meals as one of the many concessions they have been asked to take recently.
The kicker is that CUPE did not agree, so F/A's get to claim full meals during their duty day.
On the layover at the hotel you get to claim the normal meal allowances.
But as on any aircraft at Air Canada, when they board a crew meal for you, you are NOT paid.
EMJ's have no ovens so you don't get a hot meal. On any other aircraft you would be able to claim a meal perdiem if there was not hotmeal.
BUT, ACAP agreed to cold meals meals as one of the many concessions they have been asked to take recently.
The kicker is that CUPE did not agree, so F/A's get to claim full meals during their duty day.
On the layover at the hotel you get to claim the normal meal allowances.
- Jaques Strappe
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Saigon has it right.
I don't know why people are saying that you don't get per diem on the Embraer. It is the exact same as any other airplane or position with the exception of ovens. So instead of getting some over cooked slab of leather filled with preservatives that usually cannot be identified, you get a cold meat plate usually with an assortment of salads and cheeses.
Much healthier. A meal is boarded if you are flying over a meal time, otherwise, you are paid per diem just like on any other aircraft. You can expect on average $500/month in per diem unless you do nothing but turn arounds.
The F/A's rejected the deal so nothing is boarded for them at all and they have to run into the terminal and pay 20 bucks for a day old tuna sandwich. That is why their per diem cheque is higher at the end of the month.
Hope that clears it up.
I don't know why people are saying that you don't get per diem on the Embraer. It is the exact same as any other airplane or position with the exception of ovens. So instead of getting some over cooked slab of leather filled with preservatives that usually cannot be identified, you get a cold meat plate usually with an assortment of salads and cheeses.
Much healthier. A meal is boarded if you are flying over a meal time, otherwise, you are paid per diem just like on any other aircraft. You can expect on average $500/month in per diem unless you do nothing but turn arounds.
The F/A's rejected the deal so nothing is boarded for them at all and they have to run into the terminal and pay 20 bucks for a day old tuna sandwich. That is why their per diem cheque is higher at the end of the month.
Hope that clears it up.
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flyboy1234
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Lost in Saigon
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It is pretty hard to predict which positions will be available.
I would expect that there will be some RP positions available but you never know when they will show up. The majority of newhire positions will always be EMJ FO.
In the future you might see RP positions for 767, A340, and even 777.
AND........ They are still trying to figure out a way to put newhires on the A320! The Position Group LOU currently does not allow it.
I would expect that there will be some RP positions available but you never know when they will show up. The majority of newhire positions will always be EMJ FO.
In the future you might see RP positions for 767, A340, and even 777.
AND........ They are still trying to figure out a way to put newhires on the A320! The Position Group LOU currently does not allow it.
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flyboy1234
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- Jaques Strappe
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flyboy1234
I am not sure of how many vacancies there are on the 320 F/O list but I can't even fathom why ACPA is even listening to the company request to put new hires there. The only way that should be allowed is if the pay group is dissolved. Once again the company is hoist on their own petar and now want help to get out of it.
Put it this way, an A320 F/O position is outside the pay group pay so if a new hire was put in that position tomorrow, after the 2 year flat salary was over he would launch directly into formula pay making more money than several hundred senior pilots hired or recalled in the past year who are in the pay group on a junior aircraft. Everyone junior to that pilot should be allowed to pay claim that position.
I am not sure of how many vacancies there are on the 320 F/O list but I can't even fathom why ACPA is even listening to the company request to put new hires there. The only way that should be allowed is if the pay group is dissolved. Once again the company is hoist on their own petar and now want help to get out of it.
Put it this way, an A320 F/O position is outside the pay group pay so if a new hire was put in that position tomorrow, after the 2 year flat salary was over he would launch directly into formula pay making more money than several hundred senior pilots hired or recalled in the past year who are in the pay group on a junior aircraft. Everyone junior to that pilot should be allowed to pay claim that position.
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flyboy1234
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