Hero Pilot Backs
Easy Fix To Pilot Shortage: Just Let Us Fly Past Age 65
Pilot hero Jeff
Skiles, first officer on US Airways Flight 1549, which landed in the Hudson
River 13 years ago Saturday, sees a simple solution to the pilot shortage.
Let pilots who are
over 65 keep flying, Skiles says. Congress raised the mandatory retirement
age to 65 from 60 in 2007. Now it should be raised again.
Raising the
mandatory retirement age again “is something that should be looked at,”
Skiles said. “The retirement age has always been arbitrary. It never
reflected any kind of medical science.”
John Mica, the
retired former Florida congressman who spearheaded the 2007 expansion to
age 65, adds, “We could look at even further expansion today.
“I have no problem
with that, as long as they pass a medical test and also look at reflex and
cognitive ability,” Mica said in an interview Monday.
“Something that
can’t be beat is experience on the job,” Mica said. “I don’t know of any
incidents where we have had a problem [with pilots over 60].”
Today, the pilot
shortage is a looming crisis, as older pilots retire faster than newer ones
come aboard. United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby told a Senate panel last
month that United’s regional partners will have to park nearly 100 regional
jets due to the shortage. The country faces a shortage of more than 12,000
pilots by the end of 2023, according to a study by Oliver Wyman. In Japan,
the mandatory pilot retirement age is 67.
Two key factors
mitigate any risk from raising the age. One is that pilots already
undergo mandatory medical examinations every six months, so age-related
decline can be measured and tested as part of a robust, existing protocol.
Secondly, commercial aviation requires two-pilot cockpits.
“We do have to
acknowledge that as you get older, you lose some motor function and lose
some memory, but you also become very experienced,” Skiles said.
“Experience
doesn’t make up for physical decline, although it’s not the same for every
individual, but certainly, with robust testing you could extend the age,”
he said. “We already have individual testing records. We could test for
those things that are going to be problematic in older populations, and we
could continue to have those people in the cockpit.”
As for the cockpit
environment, Skiles noted that, “You are already in a multi-pilot crew.
Even with somebody 66 or 67 in the left seat (captain), the person in the
right seat passed the same check ride and is fully qualified,” and is very
likely younger.
Skiles, a
Chicago-based American Airlines AAL pilot, was hired by predecessor US
Airways in 1986. Now 62, he would like to fly after he turns 65. “I’m
healthy,” he said. “I think of myself as 35. I definitely believe (my
career) should extend to 67.”
Oh sure, hconcedes, “I’ve lost some hair. I don’t look as much like Aaron Eckhart.”
The actor played Skiles in the 2016 movie “Sully,” which told the story of
the landing of Flight 1549, which Skiles and Capt. Sully Sullenberger
landed on the Hudson River after it lost both engines. The two pilots and
the flight attendants all became heroes.
While the case for
lifting the mandatory age seems clear, it does not have the support of the
U.S. aviation community. In Skiles’ words, “At this point, the unions are
on the sidelines on this. That’s one of the difficulties of moving this
forward: No group right now is interested in doing anything about it.”
As for the
carriers, he said, “the industry keeps saying we need to lower
qualifications, not increase the age where we can take advantage of the
experience out there. and there is no John Mica out there,” Skiles
said.
Mica, a Florida
congressman for 24 years until his unexpected 2016 defeat, had a powerful
impact on aviation in various transportation-related offices including
chair of the House Transportation Committee and of its aviation
subcommittee.
Mica said he
pushed for the bill on behalf of a onetime fraternity brother, who was
“about to be forced out of a major commercial airline when he turned 60. It
was kind of unfair. He was an excellent pilot with an impeccable
record. He loved to fly. He was going to be put out to pasture. It was
something that needed to be updated.”
Mica makes clear
that he is open to extending the age past 65.
“My motivation
[the first time] was the age limit needed to be changed,” he said. “We had
that provision for decades. But today people are healthier. The live
longer. And the more experience a pilot has, the better the operations.”
The two principal
pilots’ unions, the Air Line Pilots Association and the Allied Pilots
Association, do not support an increase to 65. ALPA declined to comment for
this story.
Airlines For
America, the industry trade group, provided this one sentence comment:
“U.S. airlines comply with all federal regulations regarding our crews.”
APA spokesman
Dennis Tajer said the pilot shortage results from poor planning by the
industry. “It is not a reason to consider raising the retirement age,” he
said. APA represents 14,000 American Airlines pilots.
“Airlines and
governments have failed to ensure that there is an unhindered pathway to
becoming an airline pilot,” Tajer said. “They have failed to connect the
pilot pipeline to becoming a pilot.
“This is a pilot
pipeline problem, not a pilot shortage,” Tajer said. “After a pilot obtains
a commercial license, the supply chain breaks and many are not finding the
ability to build their experience and hours.”
As for raising the
retirement age, Tajer said, “It’s not nestled in science nor is the rest of
the world considering it. It’s a lazy solution.”
https://www.forbes.com/sites/tedreed/2022/01/10/hero-pilot-backs-easy-fix-to-pilot-shortage-just-let-us-fly-past-age-65/?sh=15b0caaf6052
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