I'm not saying that the company's figures are right, but we sure have nothing to counter it with...at least nothing that is being made widely public. Why is that?
In all honesty, I don't think it would get reported if ALPA released it. It makes better reading in so called financial journals to skew the data in favor of the company and to portray the issue as a failing of "greedy labor" vs an unbiased story. I'd expect it. After all, they cater to their readers. likewise, you won't see many articles in the ALPA rag that will say labor is the problem.
But let's cut thru the BS and look at the REAL numbers. The following link has the actual DAL contract payrates.
http://www.airlinepilotcentral.com/airline...a-200502248.htm
When calculating the "average", keep in mind that 777 and 767-400 are rather small parts of the total fleet, and also consider that the MAXIMUM a pilot can fly, by LAW is 1000 hours a year. Even is every pilot flew exactly 1000 hours a year, the average salary STILL wouldn't be $147K. Now consider those that either fly the minimum guarentee by bidding those lines, for personal or family reason, and also consider the number of folks who drop flying time to fly for the military for a week or so a month. DAL itself will point out that the average pilot only fly's 50 "hard hours" a month due to inefficient schedules on the part of management. Given the above factors, I'll bet the average pilot gets paid for 850-900 hours a year. Do the math. It ain't 147K.
In all honesty, I don't think it would get reported if ALPA released it. It makes better reading in so called financial journals to skew the data in favor of the company and to portray the issue as a failing of "greedy labor" vs an unbiased story. I'd expect it. After all, they cater to their readers. likewise, you won't see many articles in the ALPA rag that will say labor is the problem.
But let's cut thru the BS and look at the REAL numbers. The following link has the actual DAL contract payrates.
http://www.airlinepilotcentral.com/airline...a-200502248.htm
When calculating the "average", keep in mind that 777 and 767-400 are rather small parts of the total fleet, and also consider that the MAXIMUM a pilot can fly, by LAW is 1000 hours a year. Even is every pilot flew exactly 1000 hours a year, the average salary STILL wouldn't be $147K. Now consider those that either fly the minimum guarentee by bidding those lines, for personal or family reason, and also consider the number of folks who drop flying time to fly for the military for a week or so a month. DAL itself will point out that the average pilot only fly's 50 "hard hours" a month due to inefficient schedules on the part of management. Given the above factors, I'll bet the average pilot gets paid for 850-900 hours a year. Do the math. It ain't 147K.