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United has 100 aircraft on the ground due
to pilot shortage
United Airlines has informed the U.S. government that it has 100 aircraft
grounded due to a lack of pilots. This was stated by the company’s CEO, Scott
Kirby, during a U.S. Senate hearing concerning the impact left by the pandemic
on the airline industry and the survival of the company, employee salaries, and
a safe work environment.
«There was already a pilot shortage wave over the last decade in the U.S.
and as we’ve gone through COVID, it has turned into a real shortfall» Scott
further explained, as he pointed out that 100 of his company’s aircraft are not
operating because there are no pilots for them.
The release does not detail to which specific aircraft they are alluding
and if they include the regional United Express subsidiary, which is the gateway
for the company’s pilots, as well as the weakest backbone of the company’s
network.
Being a pilot in any country in the world is expensive and prerequisites to
join a sound company are high, which makes the profession unattractive to young
people, especially those who want stability, routine, and a quicker return on
the money invested in their training.
According to what was reported by our partner Aeroin, United itself
promotes training through Aviate, which establishes alliances with large civil
aviation schools and renowned universities offering aviation courses, so that
those who graduate can leave with a pre-contract that ties them to the
airline.
In addition, the low salaries of pilots in regional and national airlines
are a constant complaint, which creates a complex paradigm.
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Why is there a pilot shortage? Flight
instructor explains how difficult, time consuming, and expensive it is to join
the field
- Flight instructor Guenter Trautmann with Alpha One Air Services in Concord said many pilots were laid off during the pandemic, and others are older and retiring.
CONCORD, N.C. — United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby said dozens of planes have
been grounded due to a pilot shortage. It’s a shortage that’s being felt across
the entire industry.
"It's not something that’s really new or something that’s been driven by
the pandemic, it's something that has been emerging for a while and has been
exacerbated by the pandemic," Nicole Carriere with United Airlines said.
Flight instructor Guenter Trautmann with Alpha One Air Services in Concord
said many pilots were laid off during the pandemic, and others are older and
retiring.
“Those ones are basically falling through the roster,” Trautmann
said.
Trautmann said the real problem, though, is that they’re not easy to
replace. That is in part because of the required minimum of 1,500 flight
hours.
“It takes you probably about 2--2.5 years really to start from scratch,”
Trautmann said.
Trautmann said it’s also more challenging than some bargain for.
“Yeah, that is something a lot of people underestimate," Trautmann said.
"They do not see all the theory and studying behind it.”
If the time and difficulty isn’t a deal-breaker, Trautmann said the
financial burden could be. He said aspiring pilots like him have to finance
their own training.
“Me personally, it's about $85-90,000 which I had to basically put out of
my own pocket into pilot training," Trautmann said.
Trautmann said the payoff in salary isn’t immediate.
“I think it starts around in the $50s," Trautmann said, "$50,000 a year for
the first two years. I think the big chunk of money going into the six figures,
really you can achieve after six, seven, eight years.”
Carriere said their company has joined other airlines offering pilot
training programs that assist prospective pilots with the costs.
“There could be so many more people who would be interested in it if just
given the opportunity," Carriere said.
Carriere said their program will focus on attracting women and people of
color, whom she said are underrepresented in the pilot field.
Boeing expects the demand for airline pilots to remain high for years. The
aerospace company said in a recent report that an estimated 612,000 new pilots
will be needed worldwide over the next two decades.
Carriere said United is committed to training more than 5,000 pilots by the
end of the decade.
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