Airlines increase pilot hiring, threaten AF retention
When commercial airlines look at Air Force pilots,
they see aviators with upward of 1,500 flying hours and 10 years or more of
flying experience.
And they want to hire them. As airlines continue to
grow and Vietnam-era pilots retire, the airlines will hire about 20,000 pilots
over the next 10 years. United, American, Delta and the rest of the world's
aviation companies see the Air Force's 13,000 veteran pilots as a ready way to
staff their cockpits.
Maintainers and drone pilots are also in demand.
Airlines want experienced airplane mechanics, and a growing number of companies
are wooing experienced remotely piloted aircraft pilots with promises of big
paychecks.
Tiffany Harvey, who oversees recruiting for Southwest
Airlines, said airlines are facing a labor shortage from the impending
retirement of the Baby Boomer generation, making it more important to recruit
from the military.
"This is sort of low-hanging fruit," Harvey said.
"We've got amazing individuals coming out of the military, that are ready and
excited and passionate about starting a career, or continuing a career, that we
can utilize and capitalize on their experience. We have to look at every
pipeline available."
The airlines hope to lure pilots away by offering
hefty salaries, extensive benefits and job security without having to deploy, a
Rand Corp. study found.
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh
recognizes the threat. And he's doing his best to counter it.
"You're
going to find that military pilots will be a focal point of this recruiting.
Every time the airlines have recruited heavily in the past, we've lost more
people," he told Air Force Times. "They've been deploying, and deploying, and
deploying. After a while your family gets a little tired of that."
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