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#21
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"Mike Rapoport" wrote in
.net: "Vic" wrote in message m... Hi, I am a 35 year old software programmer thinking about a possible career change into aviation. I am currently working on my PPL. I've come to know some pilots who are currently flying for ASA and Comair. Both of them made UNDER 17,000.00 last year. They are both young guys without families, homes,etc.. so it's a bit easier for them to ride this through. Anyhow, since I haven't made up my mind yet, I would love to hear from any of you who have been in a similar situation. Especially if you are around my age, made the switch from a previous career, are married, have children and a mortgage. You get my point. How do you pay continue to pay the bills? I will obviously take a huge hit salary speaking, but I was shocked at how low the starting salaries are!! With my wife, children and mortgage, I could qualify for food stamps on that kind of pay. Also, since that would put my family below the poverty level, would I even have to pay income tax? Not to mention I will also have to make payments on student loans if I choose to go ahead with this. My CFI tells me to avoid the regionals at all costs. He suggests flying corporate, but after some research the starting salaries for a corporate pilot seem to be just as low. He also said that in a few years there will be a pilot shortage. If there is a pilot shortage in 3-5 years, what does this actually mean for newly rated commercial pilots who are looking for their first job? If anyone has any thoughts I would love to hear them. Thanks in advance! Vic Salaries will always be low in an occupation considered to be glamorous. Mike MU-2 I disagree... Salaries will always be low in an occupation that is so much fun, most of the participants would do it for free...... -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
#22
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![]() "user" wrote in message Unfortunately, that's unusual. My experience is that most developers stop learning at about age 30. From that point on, they stagnate and die. I can't count the number of times I've interviewed people, asked them to tell me about an article/book/etc discussing current technology and IT issues.... and find they haven't cracked a book since college. Hehe. I didn't go BACK to college (to learn Cisco CCNA and brush up on UNIX, and commercial flight school) until I was 35. -c |
#23
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![]() "gatt" wrote: Salaries will always be low in an occupation considered to be glamorous. The people paying the salaries, and the pilots earning them, ought to know better. Salaries should always be high in an occupation considered (by the general public) to be dangerous. Should? Maybe so, but simple supply and demand is setting pilot salaries. Mike is right: as long as there are plenty of people willing to accept the joy of flying and the prestige of being a pilot as part of their compensation, salaries will be correspondingly depressed. The only reasons some senior U. S. airline pilots are making $200k/year now are regulation and unions. Regulation is mostly gone and the wide open market is destroying the unionized carriers. The $200K left-seater is a fading anachronism. Unless there is an industry-wide revival of the union movement, watch for salaries to continue to decline for all pilots. It will be interesting to see where pay bottoms out, and what the general quality of Part 121 pilots will be when it does. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#24
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Paul Tomblin opined
In a previous article, (Vic) said: I've come to know some pilots who are currently flying for ASA and Comair. Both of them made UNDER 17,000.00 last year. They are both You know what they say: the only way to make a small fortune in aviation is to start with a large one. And know when to stop. -ash Cthulhu for President! Why vote for a lesser evil? |
#25
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May I suggest that you take your hiring blinders off?
I didn't even BECOME a developer until I was 38. I didn't even finish junior college (I got hired after 1-1/2 years) I am a damned good developer - MS Visual Basic, MS SQL Server, MS Visual InterDev, NT/2000 Server, TCP/IP, Active Directory, DNS, DHCP. And I taught myself all of these. I read a couple of chapters in a book on TCP/IP, and another couple of chapters in a book on DNS. Otherwise, I learned it all from MS helpfiles and MSDN. I "skim" a few articles and magazines to find out what the new technologies are, but I usually learn them without the aid of books are courses. So, while I'm learning new technologies by non-traditional means, you are interviewing people in a traditional, hidebound manner. So who's out of step with current technologies and methodologies? "user" wrote in message ... On Fri, 27 Aug 2004 14:04:29 +0000 (UTC), Paul Tomblin wrote: In a previous article, "William W. Plummer" said: user wrote: snip Personally, I prefer working in IT, where the surest way to get a huge pay increase is simply to threaten to quit. ;-) Threatening to quit works until you are about 35 years old. Maybe a bit longer if you walk on water. But later in life you can expect to be pushed out in favor of younger, technology-current engineers. There is no hard and fast rule that says you can't stay technology-current as you age. I started off doing FORTRAN on mainframes, went to C and Unix, then C++ and Unix, and here I am at 44 doing Java on Linux, making 50% more than I was making when I was 35. And every step up the ladder was done by identifying what I wanted to do next and teaching myself. Unfortunately, that's unusual. My experience is that most developers stop learning at about age 30. From that point on, they stagnate and die. I can't count the number of times I've interviewed people, asked them to tell me about an article/book/etc discussing current technology and IT issues.... and find they haven't cracked a book since college. What's the next technology trend? I don't know, but I'm damn sure I'm going to teach it to myself before Java on Linux jobs dry up. Although I have a nagging suspicion that my next "technology" will be "how to manage a team of programmers in India to make sure that what they produce isn't a giant cluster **** like every other outsourcing project I've seen". Oh, but it worked so WELL at GC..... - Rich |
#26
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Professional piloting is not dangerous and I doubt that the public percieves
it to be so, but even if it were, if you have more people wanting to be pilots because it is percieved as glamorous, then salaries will be lower. Mike MU-2 "gatt" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message news:zRHXc.126 Salaries will always be low in an occupation considered to be glamorous. The people paying the salaries, and the pilots earning them, ought to know better. Salaries should always be high in an occupation considered (by the general public) to be dangerous. -c |
#27
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![]() "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "gatt" wrote: Salaries will always be low in an occupation considered to be glamorous. The people paying the salaries, and the pilots earning them, ought to know better. Salaries should always be high in an occupation considered (by the general public) to be dangerous. Should? Maybe so, but simple supply and demand is setting pilot salaries. Mike is right: as long as there are plenty of people willing to accept the joy of flying and the prestige of being a pilot as part of their compensation, salaries will be correspondingly depressed. The only reasons some senior U. S. airline pilots are making $200k/year now are regulation and unions. Regulation is mostly gone and the wide open market is destroying the unionized carriers. The $200K left-seater is a fading anachronism. Unless there is an industry-wide revival of the union movement, watch for salaries to continue to decline for all pilots. It will be interesting to see where pay bottoms out, and what the general quality of Part 121 pilots will be when it does. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM Additionally the $200k is somewhat of a farce because the pensions are so underfunded. There is a recent newspaper article on the United restructuring saying that many of the pilots recieving $175K a year in retirement may be getting $28K from now on. Mike MU-2 |
#28
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![]() "ET" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in .net: "Vic" wrote in message m... Hi, I am a 35 year old software programmer thinking about a possible career change into aviation. I am currently working on my PPL. I've come to know some pilots who are currently flying for ASA and Comair. Both of them made UNDER 17,000.00 last year. They are both young guys without families, homes,etc.. so it's a bit easier for them to ride this through. Anyhow, since I haven't made up my mind yet, I would love to hear from any of you who have been in a similar situation. Especially if you are around my age, made the switch from a previous career, are married, have children and a mortgage. You get my point. How do you pay continue to pay the bills? I will obviously take a huge hit salary speaking, but I was shocked at how low the starting salaries are!! With my wife, children and mortgage, I could qualify for food stamps on that kind of pay. Also, since that would put my family below the poverty level, would I even have to pay income tax? Not to mention I will also have to make payments on student loans if I choose to go ahead with this. My CFI tells me to avoid the regionals at all costs. He suggests flying corporate, but after some research the starting salaries for a corporate pilot seem to be just as low. He also said that in a few years there will be a pilot shortage. If there is a pilot shortage in 3-5 years, what does this actually mean for newly rated commercial pilots who are looking for their first job? If anyone has any thoughts I would love to hear them. Thanks in advance! Vic Salaries will always be low in an occupation considered to be glamorous. Mike MU-2 I disagree... Salaries will always be low in an occupation that is so much fun, most of the participants would do it for free...... I don't think that we are disagreeing. Mike MU-2 -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
#29
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Amen to to that. I myself got out of IT because of the "sweat shop'
atmosphere it has turned out to be. I moved from the big city to a small town with a NICE airport but little activity. Switching gears at 35 is a 50/50 proposition, I cerainly woudn't recommend it to someone who was sane and wanted to make a really good living... Right now, as long as I can make enough money for my plane and hangar rent I'm happy. ![]() |
#30
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