Hiring of pilots soaring in U.S.
Air traffic surge, retirements cited
Air
carriers are on pace to hire nearly 5,000 pilots this year, even after canceling
thousands of flights from the grounding of the Boeing 737 Max.
Airline
hiring will top more than 4,000 pilots by year's end for the fifth-straight
year, a pace not seen since before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. That
was before mergers halved the number of major air carriers and airlines were
comfortable flying planes with more empty seats.
The industry is trying
to keep up with a record number of passengers and more pilots retiring as they
hit the mandatory age 65 limit, said Louis Smith, president of the Nevada-based
aviation hiring firm Future & Active Pilot Advisors.
"Airlines need a
lot of pilots," Smith said. "As long as the economy is good and pilots keep
retiring, someone has to fly planes."
The surge in hiring comes with an
increase in commercial air traffic throughout the country. U.S. air carriers
have shuttled about 848 million passengers this year through November, 3.9% more
than in the same period in 2018.
That includes about 75 million
passengers this year at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.
Fort
Worth-based American Airlines, which still has the most employees of any
carrier, also has hired the most pilots this year, bringing on 925. American
hired 894 pilots in 2018, Future & Active Pilot Advisors' data
showed.
American also plans to hire more pilots in 2020 than it did this
year, said American Airlines spokeswoman Lanesha Gipson.
Southwest
Airlines, which is headquartered at Dallas Love Field, has actually cut back on
hiring this year, adding only 390 through November after bringing on 759 in
2018.
Southwest, which owns the most grounded Boeing 737 Max planes,
delayed first officer training in late 2019 and doesn't plan to hold another
class again until February. It also put off some pilot promotions to the captain
position.
Southwest was supposed to get about 41 more 737 Max planes this
year, but the aircraft has been sidelined by the Federal Aviation Administration
since March 13 and the agency is taking its time to get it back into
service.
However, Southwest is still making plans to boost pilot hiring
in the future. In July, the airline launched a recruitment program called
Destination 225 to partner with universities and flight schools. The program is
intended to give pilots a direct path to flying for Southwest Airlines after
they complete flight school.
Delta Air Lines has hired 6,800 employees
this year to replace retiring workers and to grow, said Chief Executive Officer
Ed Bastian.
Next year, Atlanta-based Delta plans to hire thousands more
employees, including 1,300 pilots and 2,500 flight attendants.
After
striking partnerships with airlines around the world including Air France-KLM,
Virgin Atlantic, Korean Air, Aeromexico, China Eastern and most recently LATAM,
Bastian said Delta is now the largest airline revenue group in the
world.
On the Sunday after Thanksgiving, he said, Delta had its highest
single-day revenue in its history, bringing in nearly $200 million that
day.
"The U.S. consumer is healthy and is responding well," Bastian
said.
Airlines have been facing a potential shortage of pilots during the
next few years, mostly from retirement. Some 2,000 to 3,000 pilots a year at the
country's 11 biggest airlines will turn 65 and age out of the
system.
Airlines have been upping efforts to get students into pilot
training programs and regional airlines, where starting pay was as low as
$22,000 a few years ago, said Mike Sykes, CEO of US Aviation Academy in Denton,
Texas.
Now, pilots can make $50,000 to $60,000 a year in their first and
second years, including big signing bonuses that first year. In 2016, American
Airlines regional subsidiary Envoy Air started offering signing bonuses of up to
$22,100 for new pilots and retention bonuses of $10,000 after the first year of
flying. Envoy is also willing to pay up to $45,000 in signing bonuses for
experienced pilots.
"I would say it's been a good five years since
students with enough flight hours had to work really hard to get a regional
pilot position," Sykes said.
Pilot pay at mainline airlines such as
American is good, but many inexperienced pilots were looking at up to $100,000
in debt for flight school and then careers where many are "just scrapping by,"
Sykes said.
But Sykes said rising pay has helped lure more students. He
said financial institutions that dropped out of lending for flight schools are
reentering the market.
At American Airlines, average pilot pay hit
$229,000 a year in 2018, up from $138,000 a decade ago, according to the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Airline Data Project. The pay at Southwest
was $234,000 for the average pilot, $52,000 better than in 2008.
"The
money is really good once you get to the mainline," Sykes said. "It used to be
that you had to suffer through flying for a regional with low pay, but that's
not the case anymore."
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