The airport in mention is just about due South of downtown Chandler. Former Williams AFB, where I got my training, is due east. Cute and interesting story this.
China Needs PilotsA boom in Chinese air travel is
sending hundreds of novices to flight school in Arizona.
TransPac Aviation Academy's February 2015
graduating class, in character. The Arizona flight school's student body is
roughly 80 percent Chinese. (Kim Gale)
Just out of university in
Fujian, China, Sheldon Yu faced an impossible choice. It was either a master's
degree in Marxist philosophy or a career as a commercial airline pilot. Among
the perks of the latter option: unlimited travel, social prestige, smartly
tailored uniforms, lots of pretty women, and a lifelong contract with good
salary.
So what did Yu choose? Marxist philosophy.
"I decided to
study," he chuckles. "My parents wanted me to be a middle school teacher so I
could remain near home and see them all the time."
But fate, and a thirst
for flight, intervened. Twice in his undergraduate years, Yu applied for Chinese
flight training; he'd even passed the Xiamen Airlines physical, one of the
toughest in commercial aviation. Though his parents opposed the idea, Sheldon
kept thinking of the airplanes he used to watch take off and land at Fujian
Airport near his home when he was a boy.
"So here I am at 26, just
graduating with a three-year master's degree," he continues, "and quite
accidentally a Xiamen Airlines recruiter is interviewing candidates in the
office next to mine. 'Hey,' I tell him, 'I've just finished my master's in
Marxist philosophy. Could you give me an opportunity to fly?' The recruiter said
'Okay.' And step by step I ended up here today." He grins.
We're in a
conference room at TransPac Aviation Academy near Scottsdale, Arizona, and on
the wall behind him hang a Chinese good luck sign and a map of his country. Yu,
whose formal Chinese name is Yu Zonghua (he prefers his adopted Western name for
professional purposes), is regaling me and his fellow classmates, Troy Tao and
Kinno Yang, with stories about the serendipities that brought him to this
American flight academy, one with a distinct Chinese style. He sparkles in his
crisp navy and white uniform, a pair of aviator sunglasses hanging from his
shirt pocket.
Headquartered at Deer Valley Airport and Chandler Municipal
Airport, which are about 45 minutes apart if traveling by car, TransPac is one
of a few large, private U.S. flight schools specializing in the training of
Asian pilots. In TransPac's case, the student body, approximately 400, is more
than 80 percent Chinese, with about 45 Vietnamese and a few American and
Colombian students in the remainder.
Yu, Tao, and Yang come from very
different academic backgrounds, but all three are part of TransPac's 2015 class
of ab initio-"zero to hero"-Chinese pilots earning their commercial ratings in
less than 14 months. The three are among 360 Chinese candidates at TransPac who
have been tapped to get this elite commercial education: from private and
instrument ratings to multi-engine turbine, all the way up to a high-performance
rating that readies them for specific jet training back in China. Each Chinese
cadet's tuition and living package, at more than $100,000 each, is paid in full
by his or her "home" airline. Because of the demands created by rapid expansion,
regional Chinese airlines are too busy to train all their pilot candidates.
Instead, the recruited cadet signs a contract for lifelong service, then takes
the training in the United States.
David Morse (far left), a senior instructor at
TransPac, leads students (from left) Kinno Yang, Sheldon Yu, and Troy Tao
through a standard preflight check, inspecting the ailerons of one of 15 Piper
Seminoles in TransPac's 58-aircraft fleet. (Eric Long)
"There's a
huge market in China right now for aviation, especially general aviation," says
David Hsu, the vice president of Pegasus International Resources Inc., a company
that paves the way for relationships and contracts among the Civil Aviation
Administration of China (CAAC), the Chinese commercial carriers, and U.S. flight
academies. Before 2012, Hsu explains, the Chinese military controlled all
airspace, and pilot training programs were extremely limited.
But now
China is considering opening up airspace below 1,000 meters (about 3,300 feet)
for general aviation, and the CAAC has recommended opening airspace as high as
3,000 meters. While the military has yet to approve these changes, and China's
airline radar system isn't ready for them-Hsu says the expected boom in air
traffic would require a massive upgrade-the CAAC's announcements have set off a
pilot-training and equipment-buying frenzy.
Some 200 Chinese companies
have applied for general aviation licenses, most for corporate or private
flying. Commercial carriers are diving into the mix with new acquisitions and
expanded training plans.
To meet rising demand, the country will support
as many as 100 airlines in the next few decades, according to Chinese media. Yet
Boeing recently estimated that within 20 years, China will have a shortfall of
77,400 commercial pilots. (The country's regional airlines are recruiting
foreign pilots: Shenzhen Airlines recently advertised for a captain's position
paying an annual salary of $212,000.) The country's 12 civilian aviation
academies are operating at full capacity, and can turn out only 1,200 to 1,400
certified commercial pilots per year. Chinese airlines spend the equivalent of
$162 million annually to send 80 percent of the student pilot candidates abroad:
about 2,000 to the United States, the others to Europe and Australia. The big
advantage of learning abroad is English language immersion. Aviation, even in
China, is a business conducted in English.
TransPac promotes itself as a
multicultural flight academy that teaches, as much as possible, "the Chinese
way." Many of the school's requirements-which include 60-plus hours of aviation
English, a six-week ground school in China prior to students getting the final
go-ahead to train in Arizona, and a military approach to scheduling and
discipline-have been shaped by interactions with the CAAC and Chinese airline
clients. "Airline culture is more formal in Asia," Hsu says.But even students
who have struggled with English or flying skills have been encouraged to stick
it out. David Morse, Chief Instructor at TransPac, smiles when he recalls a
student named Shi Kai, who went by Stanley. "He was from Chengdu, a rural kid
from Sichuan province," Morse says. "He was really having trouble adjusting to
English, but he wanted to do it and he'd come into everyone's office to practice
and ask questions. Everyone fell in love with him." When he fell behind his
class by several months, "he did everything in his power to catch up. Finally,
at his graduation he got a standing ovation. He had struggled, but he put his
head down and just went to work."
Mastering aviation English along with
flight skills is a tall order. Nader Yassa, an American citizen who was born in
Egypt but came to the United States at the age of two, is TransPac's CEO and
CFO. He learned to fly in the Phoenix area. "I was always listening on the radio
to these young men and women learning to speak English and to fly a plane at the
same time," Yassa says. "I have always had the greatest respect for
them."
In Yassa's view, Americans believe flying is an expression of
freedom and adventure; individuals pay for that privilege. The Chinese see it
less romantically: Being a pilot is a job, albeit a prestigious and
well-paid-and subsidized-one.
Still, Yassa says some U.S. flight
academies approach international students as though there is no difference in
orientation. "We ask our clients, 'What are your requirements? What's the best
way to train students coming from your country?' " he says.
Although the
Asian recruits now generally come from math and engineering universities (there
are still a few from the Chinese military, but not as many as before), the CAAC
expects that about 10 percent of the candidates who make it to Arizona will fail
or drop out. Most Chinese candidates have never flown an airplane before; a few,
from rural backgrounds, never flew in one before they were selected for the
TransPac training program.
But the school has managed to reduce attrition
to less than three percent, Yassa says, and not by lowering check ride standards
or curving exam scores. The low washout rate is due to a tough preflight vetting
of international candidates, says Yassa-in the form of that six-week course
students take in China, conducted in English by TransPac staff, before they
leave for Arizona. (Vietnamese candidates complete a three-month program at
Vietnam's Air Force Academy in Nha Trang.) "We're even able to vet for
motivation," Yassa says. "That's the last piece of the puzzle. In a standard
one-time screening, you can't tell who is really motivated. But if you sit with
a student, you'll know after three weeks."
Candidates fly five days a
week in TransPac's fleet of 58 aircraft, mostly Piper Archers and Piper
Seminoles, and they're required by CAAC regulation to finish all their ratings
in about 250 hours-plus the high-performance bridge program, a five- to
seven-week polisher that students complete after earning their commercial
aviation rating at TransPac. This is a CAAC-mandated program, a prep course for
the advanced Boeing 737 or Airbus A320 that includes 129 hours of academic
coursework, 10 hours in a full-motion simulator, and 10 hours in the air in a
turbine aircraft. For the latter requirement, TransPac uses a Beechcraft King
Air 90 eight-seater.
But long before they get there, the school drills
students with safety protocol, see-and-avoid drills, and heavy red indicators on
ramps to prevent propeller accidents. Checklists aren't enough, according to
Brett Cavitt, TransPac's Senior Director of Advanced Training, who joined the
school in 2008. Chinese students, he says, are amazing at memorization, "but
memorizing isn't an indication of understanding," he says. "So we spend time on
situational awareness-what's happening, probing deeper. It's almost a Socratic
method of teaching. The students talk about scenarios and learn it's not all
about a checklist."
Once they pass all their certifications, students
return to China and take three tests. Two are in aviation English; one is the
theoretical Air Transportation Pilots License (ATPL) exam. If the candidate
passes, and most do, the regional airline will accept him or her as a pilot
employee and provide additional training on the fleet's jets-either Airbus A320s
or Boeing 737s. The pilot takes another 56 to 72 hours of simulation and
practices 12 to 20 takeoffs and landings.
After passing a check ride, the
candidate is bumped up to a position of third-tier "first officer" and placed in
a cockpit jump seat behind a real captain and first officer. Chinese airlines
require another 200 to 250 hours of jump-seat observation before a new pilot can
sit in the right seat and fly the airplane. Several hundred more hours in this
position are required before the candidate is finally promoted to first-tier
first officer and gets to take off and land the airplane with passengers
aboard.
Certified flight instructors working at TransPac also undergo
stringent vetting before they're employed as teachers. They attend ground school
to learn TransPac procedures, undergo simulation training, and have to perform
the exact same stage checks-that is, verification by another CFI that you know
all the things you're expected to know, in the form of a written or oral quiz
plus a test flight-in the air that students would demonstrate at the end of the
course. While many schools only employ freelance instructors and pay at an
hourly rate, TransPac instructors get a full-time salary and
benefits.
Morse says the washout rate for instructors is a little less
than 20 percent, a figure he attributes to the academy's high standards and
rigid approach to discipline. "It takes a special instructor to teach in this
type of environment," he says.
It also takes a special student. Cadets
Kinno Yang and Troy Tao both struggled with culture shock upon arriving in
Arizona. "When I first came here I really wasn't adjusted to the school
atmosphere," says Yang, a 23-year-old Nanjing native and junior at Nanjing
University of Aeronautical and Astronomical Engineering. "I have no brothers or
sisters; I'm one son, and my parents have big plans for me." Yang's father had
wanted to be a pilot but he couldn't pass the physical. All hopes are on Yang,
who will be flying with Sichuan Airlines when he graduates. You can imagine the
pressure he's under.
So what stresses him out most? The flying?
Exams?
"Oral English," Yang says. "Sometimes I have to use a dictionary
for aviation terms because all the textbooks and instructions are in English."
After completing the private pilot's exam, Yang says, he relaxed a bit, and that
helped his English improve. His days aren't all stressful now. "The spirit of
the school, the weather, the atmosphere, suits me," he says.
The school's
atmosphere of military discipline does not mean Spartan living conditions.
Students live near Deer Valley Airport in dormitory-style apartments, two
students to a bedroom, two or three bedrooms in a spacious, fully furnished
suite. They have TVs, air conditioning, and well-equipped kitchens and
bathrooms. There's a gym, movie rooms, and outdoor pools. The school provides
six buses for transport and even offers Chinese cooking classes for cadets who
never learned to cook at home. In their spare time, buddies will pool their
airline per diem and do grand shopping trips, and get together to cook in teams.
On the weekends, they play basketball, go bowling or shopping, or swim and have
barbecues.
Troy Tao, who has a master's degree from Xiamen University in
nanotechnology and engineering, had no trouble with English or the Western
lifestyle. But Phoenix's summer climate taxes him. "Sometimes the weather
changes here are fierce and so is the turbulence we fly in," he says, noting
that in the summer, it can get to 113 degrees Fahrenheit.
TransPac has
had its own share of turbulence. Online, disgruntled instructors have posted
that pay is low and that students share exam questions on social media, enabling
others to cheat. The school has also experienced several accidents. In May 2013
an airplane with two TransPac instructors was struck 900 feet above ground by a
Cessna rented by an independent instructor from a neighboring flight school. The
TransPac teachers, the Cessna pilot, and his student all died.
In May of
this year, the National Transportation Safety Board issued a finding that the
probable cause of the crash was "the failure of the pilots in both aircraft to
maintain adequate visual lookout in a known training area where multiple
aircraft frequently operated."
A February 2014 Arizona Republic report
documented a total of three fatal accidents involving TransPac students between
2010 and 2013, concluding that TransPac's accident rate, calculated per 100,000
flight hours, was substantially lower than the national average. Since the May
2013 accident, TransPac has installed ADS-B (Automatic Dependent
Surveillance-Broadcast) on its entire fleet, equipment the Federal Aviation
Administration will mandate for all aircraft by 2020.
For Tao, trust in
his instructors and aircraft equipment was a big part of getting back into the
cockpit after his frightening, early experience with turbulence. "The first time
I flew over Phoenix at night with my instructor, I thought the lights were
incredibly beautiful," he says. "I loved that."
Sheldon Yu, the Marxist
philosopher, says that when he prepared for his first solo flight, he wasn't
afraid at all. He's absorbed a "Just do it" attitude. "My impression is that
American optimism is a talent," he says. "In China, people are goal-directed and
worried about things like 'Tomorrow I'll buy a house.' But a lot of Americans
aren't like that; they don't worry and think that way. The Americans seem
happier."
Yu has learned to reconcile his ambition to fly with his need
for philosophical inquiry. "I can now get on a plane and announce, 'Marx said my
career choice of being a pilot was a great thing!' "
After all, a pilot's
contribution to society is clear. Especially in 21st century China.
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