It's getting a lot more lucrative to become a pilot
Zack Tusing, 19, is working on his pilot's
license. He's hoping to get hired by an airline by the time he's
21.
Zack Tusing is training to be a pilot. One of his favorite
places to fly is a spot along the Hudson River, overlooking New York City. Sure,
he says, it's a little scary hovering next to skyscrapers and being suspended
over water in a one engine Cessna.
"Other than that, it's really cool,"
Tusing said. "Central Park is cool to see. Being right at the top of One World
Trade Center is cool. You can see Yankee Stadium."
Tusing is 19, and he
has been training to be a pilot since he was a toddler.
"When I was three
or four, my dad would hook up, I think it was a Microsoft Flight Simulator 1995,
on the computer, and I would just try to get the plane on the ground somewhere
without crashing," he said.
When he took his first actual flying lesson
at 13, the outlook for pilots wasn't great. It was 2011, and there had been a
decade of turmoil in the airline industry - with downturns after 9/11 and during
the recession. About 10,000 pilots were furloughed.
Entry-level pilot
salaries were about $22,000 a year on average, according to the aviation
advisory firm FAPA. Meanwhile, training could cost five times that, says Wendy
Beckman, who runs the aerospace department at Middle Tennessee State University.
"You heard stories of people on food stamps and living at home and
sleeping in crew lounges," Beckman said.
Infinity Flight Group, a flight training school,
opened a few years ago with a three-plane fleet. Now it has 25 planes and it's
having trouble keeping up with demand.
Tusing didn't want to give
up his dream. In fall 2016, he enrolled in Penn State Abington's business
program, with plans to get his pilot's license after graduation.
But
there was a shift happening in the airline industry.
There's a mandatory
retirement age for pilots: 65. That time has come for a lot of them, says
Gregory John, who runs Infinity Flight Group, the pilot training school Tusing
attends.
"It's estimated [that in] the next 10 years, half of all pilots
will be retiring from major airlines," John said.
The big airlines, like
American and United, have hired more than 4,000 pilots this year - an eightfold
increase from just five years ago, according to FAPA.
A lot of those
pilots come from the regional airlines. That's left the regionals with a pilot
shortage. Last year, 35 percent of available pilot jobs at those airlines went
unfilled, according to the Regional Airline Association. The regional airlines
have had to up their game. They've more than doubled pilot starting pay, to
almost $50,000 a year on average, according to FAPA. Regional airlines are also
offering signing bonuses of up to $31,000, and they're helping to pay for flight
training.
"They'll help pay for some of your flight training," John said.
"They'll guarantee you a job."
Some are also relaxing their preference
for a college degree. So in January, Zack Tusing dropped out of college to train
as a pilot full time. Tusing has flown about 200 hours so far; he needs 1,500 to
get hired at a commercial airline. He says it'll probably cost him $80,000 all
told. But he sees a real future as a pilot.
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