Getting There: Airlines experience nosedive in pilots
Regional U.S. air carriers have begun canceling fights and
eliminating service to smaller cities due to a shortage in pilots. Photo:
Vincent Yu / Associated Press / AP
International aviation is about to
face a crisis: a shortage of pilots.
Domestically, regional carriers,
which represent 42 percent of all passengers, are already canceling flights and
eliminating service to smaller cities. Qantas, the largest carrier in Australia,
is pulling old 747s out of mothballs because it doesn't have enough qualified
pilots for its 737s, the most dominate - and much more fuel efficient - aircraft
in its fleet.
Europe's biggest airline, Ryanair, canceled thousands of
flights last November because of inadequate staffing. Japanese airlines are so
desperate for pilots they are raising the mandatory retirement age to
67.
In China's booming aviation market, airlines are luring experienced
captains with salaries starting at $500,000, including signing bonuses. That's
attracting U.S. pilots, who are also offered free business-class flights home to
America every three weeks to see their families.
The number of active
U.S. commercial aviators dropped by 30,000 between 2008 and 2016 just as
American carriers experienced a resurgence. About 1,000 Canadian pilots are
estimated to now to be flying for oversees airlines, which offer better
pay.
Even the U.S. military is feeling the pain with the Air Force, Navy
and Marine Corps suffering a 25 percent reduction in fighter pilot staffing. It
costs up $11 million to train a single fighter pilot. So where are they going?
To the commercial airlines, especially overseas.
Boeing said the
international aviation market will need 637,000 more pilots in the next 20 years
as air traffic doubles. But where will these pilots be found?
Aside from
the military, it's been small domestic airlines that have been the traditional
training ground for big U.S. airlines. But after a series of crashes, the FAA
changed the rules in 2010 to require pilots to have 1,500 hours of flight time
before stepping up to the big time. The U.S. Department of Transportation is now
considering reducing that minimum.
Just a few years ago, regional
carriers paid their pilots as little as $20,000 a year. The hours were long and
the rewards few. There was a popular joke among small airline pilots: What's the
difference between a pilot and a pizza? A pizza can feed a family of
four.
The starting pay now at the regionals is closer to $50,000. Still,
those recruits need extensive and expensive training that costs triple what it
was in the 1990s. Graduates of the aviation colleges are starting their careers
with up to $300,000 in student-loan debt.
Now even flight instructors are
in short supply. So too are designated flight examiners, who conduct mandatory
"check rides" for pilot applicants who now must schedule those "driving tests"
up to six months in advance.
The use of simulators instead of actual
in-air flight time may help trainees, though some suggest would-be pilots should
start as early as high school in programs such as the U.S. Air Force's Junior
ROTC.
Bottom line: Until more pilots are properly trained, certified and
paid a competitive wage, the pilot shortage will mean we will continue to see
cuts in regular service, especially to smaller airports. "Getting There," if
it's not to a big city, will be inconvenient and expensive, if even
possible.
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