Shannoner
Well-Known Member
If you keep on dumbing down the air transport industry (particularly flight crew), you will get dumber and dumber operators (pilots). Then the safety gains that have been won over decades, paid for by higher price travel, will start to unwind and go in reverse.
$16,000 p.a. salary (less than a 'burger flipper') for a first officer in a US regional airline? Trainees who pay the airline to increase their flight hours so buy their way on to becoming first officer on passenger carrying flights? These are just a couple of examples of an industry that is going the wrong way. The inertia of the system is (largely) masking these distortions for the moment, but the train will hit the buffers sooner or later.
Surley, Ryanair/Easyjet flight crew and aircraft are subject to the same stringent safety rules and regulations that "high cost" airline crew and aircraft are subject to?
The Ryanair/Easyjet business model works by providing p*ss poor customer service, not by cutting corners on safety, e.g. 1 second late for check in and you don't board and have to buy another flight if you want to fly, your bag is 1cm to big for carry on and you pay to check it in, your flight is cancelled...tough sh*t no hotel etc etc.
If you are prepared to play by their rules and follow them to the letter, you will get a very cheap flight. Which is what I have done every time I fly with them. The reason I don't particularly relish flying with Ryanair, is that they treat me like sh#te and not because I feel they are not safe.
This may not suit all people, so they are free to pay the extra and fly with the high cost airlines, and they will get top notch customer service.
But IMHO to say that low cost airlines cut corners on safety is wrong.
Mick (not O'Leary)