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Transportation United States

The US is Facing a Serious Shortage of Airline Pilots (cnn.com) 428

An anonymous reader shares a report: The national security of the United States relies on a healthy airline industry. That requires modern reliable airplanes -- and highly skilled pilots to operate them. However, the United States has a shortage of pilots right now, particularly at the regional airline levels. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, there were about 827,000 pilots in America in 1987. Over the past three decades, that number has decreased by 30%. Meanwhile, during this period, there has been a tremendous increase in the demand for air travel. The International Air Transport Association predicts that, over the next 20 years, air travel will double.

This is a classic case of low supply and high demand. This mismatch has created a perfect storm that could wreak havoc on the US airline industry over the next decade. The somber news is this shortage is going to get much worse. I have not only studied and researched the airline industry since 1978, but I also was a pilot for 19 years, before going back to academia in 2006.

In the 1970s, when most of today's airline pilots like myself were growing up, piloting for an airline was considered a prestigious career. The job offered not only high salaries and nice schedules with many days off, but also a respected position in society. In the early 1990s, pilot salaries approached $300,000 in today's dollars for some international pilots. What's more, during this time, the military had a steady and consistent demand for pilots. A young aspiring aviator could go into the military to receive all of his or her flight training. Once these pilots had fulfilled their military commitment, they were almost guaranteed a good job flying for a major airline. Today, this is no longer the case. The career of the airline pilot has lost its luster.

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The US is Facing a Serious Shortage of Airline Pilots

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  • Here's a thought: (Score:5, Insightful)

    by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:42PM (#56963644) Homepage
    Here's a thought: they could try paying pilots decently, and giving them reasonable work schedules.

    I know, that's crazy talk.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:49PM (#56963698)

      Here's a thought: they could try paying pilots decently, and giving them reasonable work schedules.

      I know, that's crazy talk.

      The starting wage for a pilot at a major carrier is $70-80 an hour with the ability to have a contractually guaranteed minimum of 70-80 hours a month. Pilots with seniority can easily makes $250k in a year before bonuses or profit sharing. Regionals currently pay about $50-60k yearly plus sign-up and retention bonuses. The issue isn't the pay or the work rules. The issue is requiring 1000-1500 hours of flight time before you can get an ATP certification which is a requirement to work for a commercial passenger airline. Before the changes after the Colgan Air crash you only needed 250 hours to be an FO with a regional carrier.

      • by brxndxn ( 461473 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:53PM (#56963724)

        $50-60k/year is garbage for a skilled technical field that requires travel 100% of the time. Pay the pilots more and the shortage will go away. Also, the airlines should start paying for training programs if they really want pilots - just like other industries need to train operators for manufacturing plants, IT staff, or maintenance workers.

        • why train when they can get an 100K student loan to cover it.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Anonymous Coward

            You can't get student loans to cover it. Student loans are only for education, not experience. You need 1500 hours of experience. That cost is on you.

            • and, unless the Military paid for it, that cost is quite expensive.

              You want to see ludicrous ? Go price what it will cost to be a commercial helicopter pilot.

          • by zlives ( 2009072 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:23PM (#56963960)

            coming soon, we must increase rates... also more h1b pilots needed....

            • by clodney ( 778910 )

              coming soon, we must increase rates... also more h1b pilots needed....

              I know you were being sarcastic, but yes, this will require airlines to increase rates. Pilots aren't a huge part of an airlines labor force, but if airlines are forced to invest in training/apprenticeships to bring new pilots into the system, and to raise pay to make it a more appealing career, that will raise their costs, and they will seek to pass it along to their customers.

              Since deregulation, airlines have been a very low margin business, so they don't have lots of ability to absorb the increased cost

              • And if foreign pilots want to work with an American carrier, an H1-B would be one of the ways.

                Hmm...have you heard about all the foreign plane crashes past few years?

                From everything I've read, at many foreign airports, especially where H1-B's would come from....they are a chaotic mess, not something we'd want to import "here"....that and language barrier between them and control towers.

            • by SumDog ( 466607 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:11PM (#56964278) Homepage Journal

              > h1b pilots

              Other countries don't have shortages because they get paid a lot more. Why the hell would anyone want to get a visa to be a pilot here?

          • by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:06PM (#56964242)

            why train when they can get an 100K student loan to cover it.

            100K isn't going to get you enough flight time to fly charters and is only a drop in the bucket towards the 1500 minimum hours to be an ATP. Especially when a small twin engine is going to run you $150+/hour and a flight instructor another $80. It's going to take YEARS to accrue enough flight time and at least $300K in flying expenses.

            By my rough calculations you will blow a quarter of a million dollars in flight time and at least 5 years of living time before you can manage to land a charter pilot gig at about 800 hours. Then, it will take you another 5 years of being a busy charter pilot to get you near 1,500 hours, but you will be destitute trying to service your debt on that salary. Once you get to 1,500, you have the option of taking a ATP job with a feeder airline, flying awful routes in shoddy old aircraft for another 5-10 years before you can land a job at one of the majors, with 15 years experience and about 3,000 hours of time.

            The pilot gig is not a comfortable one. You got to really love what you do to live like a pauper working the night shift away from home until you are 35 or older.

        • Re:Here's a thought: (Score:5, Informative)

          by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:05PM (#56963818)

          That is for 80 hours a month. Our normal work jobs in the us have us ordinary folks working 160 hours a month.

          The hourly rate is well into the normal 6 figure if working full time.

          Higher pay and benefits may help, but I expect the crazy hours, and being away for home on long day stretches factor in too. What is the point in making a lot of money if you are living like homeless bum, because you are never home.

          • by michelcolman ( 1208008 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:37PM (#56964068)

            Those 80 hours a month are flight time. That doesn’t take into account the time preparing the flight, the time on the ground between flights, and the time finishing up after the last flight. That brings you pretty close to the amount of time “ordinary folks” work, and then that doesn’t even take the crazy schedules into account. Early shifts, late shifts, weekends equivalent to weekdays,...

            • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:21PM (#56964332)

              Also worth noting that an airline pilot has huge responsibilities. It means you can't afford not to be in perfect condition to start flying. And that's hard to keep up with all these irregular schedules.
              There is a moral responsibility and written rules. For example, there are mandatory health checkups, zero tolerance for alcohol, etc...

              There is on-call duty too, where you have to be ready to get to the airport within an hour or so.

              It used to be a demanding but rewarding job. Today, it is still demanding but less rewarding.

            • Don't forget sleep deprivation.

              Pilots get to rush to a company sleep facility that is like a crappy motel. Probably has several people sleeping there, but coming and going at all hours so that nobody really gets good sleep.

              Pilots don't get to party with alcohol.
          • Re:Here's a thought: (Score:5, Informative)

            by bkmoore ( 1910118 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:52PM (#56964552)

            That is for 80 hours a month. Our normal work jobs in the us have us ordinary folks working 160 hours a month....

            I'm a regional airline pilot and work well over 160 hours a month for between 80 -100 hours of flight pay. I have worked many 14+ hour days where I only get 4.5 - 5 hours of pay. The rest of the time is aircraft swaps, delays, maintenance, weather, time between legs (airport appreciation), ready reserve, etc.

            The only reason people work for low pay at a regional is the carrot of being able to move on to a legacy airline such as Delta, United, America, etc and being able to earn a middle-class living. But there's no clear path to a legacy carrier. Some promise flow through, but that seems to be the exception rather than the rule. You apply and hope to get invited for an interview and maybe a job. When the economy goes down the tubes, a lot of legacy pilots wind up back at the regionals and take a 70% pay cut to just keep flying. I'm considering going to Asia as a plan B.

            • time between legs (airport appreciation)

              I "appreciate" my time in airports too. The air is always bitterly cold and life sapping dry. There the vending machines are constantly empty, the coffee is overpriced, and if the shops have fruit for sale its over ripe. There's always a TV to watch for entertainment, where you can choose from CNN, Weather Channel, or Arrivals and Departures.

              When the economy goes down the tubes, a lot of legacy pilots wind up back at the regionals and take a 70% pay cut to just keep flying. I'm considering going to Asia as a plan B.

              I hope that you choose to stay but I wish you clear skies wherever the winds take you.

        • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

          $50-60k/year is garbage for a skilled technical field that requires travel 100% of the time. Pay the pilots more and the shortage will go away. Also, the airlines should start paying for training programs if they really want pilots - just like other industries need to train operators for manufacturing plants, IT staff, or maintenance workers.

          But that's $50K a year for half-time work and when you only need to drive to work a few times a month (assuming you're doing long-hauls with overnight stays), you can live well outside of expensive cities.

          That makes the pay more attractive.

          • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:19PM (#56963922) Homepage Journal

            On the other hand, while it is half time work, most of your other time is spent somewhere you probably don't really want to be in yet another cookie cutter hotel room with only the contents of your suitcase.

            In other words, a lot like being at work.

          • by clodney ( 778910 )

            But that's $50K a year for half-time work and when you only need to drive to work a few times a month (assuming you're doing long-hauls with overnight stays), you can live well outside of expensive cities.

            That makes the pay more attractive.

            Long hauls are the most desirable routes, and routes are usually bid according to seniority. A captain on an A-320 flying Detroit to Hong Kong has a very different work life than a first officer on a Bombardier regional jet working for a feeder airline, flying Chicago to Iowa City to Fargo to Duluth.

        • by iCEBaLM ( 34905 )

          Who the hell trains IT staff? Where do I sign up?

          • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:59PM (#56964602) Homepage
            If the power supply in a production server catches fire, best practice is to schedule a meeting to determine whether DevOps should fix it, or whether the software team can issue a software patch to correct the issue.
            • If the power supply in a production server catches fire, best practice is to schedule a meeting to determine whether DevOps should fix it, or whether the software team can issue a software patch to correct the issue.

              The result of the meeting will be that the software team should rush out an untested patch which will set the redundant power supply on fire as well.

      • by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:04PM (#56963808) Homepage

        Here's a thought: they could try paying pilots decently, and giving them reasonable work schedules.

        I know, that's crazy talk.

        The starting wage for a pilot at a major carrier is $70-80 an hour with the ability to have a contractually guaranteed minimum of 70-80 hours a month.

        So, why does the first hit on my google search for "starting pay for airline pilots" say "Starting Salaries. A regional airline pilots in the U.S. typically starts out making an hourly rate of $20 – $50 per hour, or about $20,000-$40,000 per year, depending on the airline, type of aircraft, and the pilot's experience level. [pea.com]"

        with the ability to have a contractually guaranteed minimum of 70-80 hours a month.

        ...and, as the very same page on my google search helpfully tells me, "The average airline pilot logs 75 hours a month in the air and sometimes up to 150 hours per month performing ground duties like simulator training, maintaining records, performing pre-flight inspections, flight planning and traveling to and from hotels and airports."

        ...

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

          ...and, as the very same page on my google search helpfully tells me, "The average airline pilot logs 75 hours a month in the air and sometimes up to 150 hours per month performing ground duties like simulator training, maintaining records, performing pre-flight inspections, flight planning and traveling to and from hotels and airports."

          ...

          Any simulator training that an airline pilot receives is paid on top of whatever flight time they have for that month (and must adhere to the same FARs as flight time such as 30 in 168). Pre-flight is about a 30-minute process, most flight planning is already done for them, and maybe an international pilot would spend about 3 hours combined going from cockpit to hotel room and hotel room back to airport. If a pilot is spending 150 hours in a simulator they are getting a type rating or qualifying on a new

      • by _Sharp'r_ ( 649297 ) <sharper@@@booksunderreview...com> on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:20PM (#56963926) Homepage Journal

        Trust CNN to run a "conversation" article about supply and demand devoid of actual economics.

        First, the author starts by blaming deregulation and the related advent of lower cost airlines. Then the author continues by blaming regulation for artificially limiting supply, i.e. the 1500 hour rule. Finally, they author proposes his preferred solution of Airlines creating their own flight academies (trying to increase supply of pilots again), for which the author conveniently is a teaching assistant for the academy he proposes as the solution to the problem. Is he trying to get a better job with the school, but they need more students?

        If you've been following along, you might notice government regulations made air travel more expensive until it was finally loosened and airlines could compete on route and price instead of other "benefits" most customers didn't actually want to pay for. As a result, lots more people are able to fly to travel. (P.S. This is a good thing)

        Not content with that, the government then comes back later and severely restricts the supply of airline first officers, taking the existing requirement of 250 hours (commercial pilot) and multiplying it by 6 to 1500 hours (ATP pilot). Overreaction to one incident, anyone? The first fatal crash in 3 years and they multiply the requirements to be an airline pilot by 6x?

        The best part of the Wikipedia article on the crash [wikipedia.org] is the description of the regulatory solution, "Although it did nothing to address the specific causes of the crash ..." Basically the pilots weren't paying attention to the instruments, according to the flight recorders, then the reacted "not according to their training" to the resulting stall.

        So the 1500 hours ATP requirement didn't even do anything to solve the problem of the crash which prompted it (both Colgan flight pilots had more than 1500 flight hours). That's pretty typical of this sort of regulation.

        The demand side is fine (we want people to fly!), so how about we take the dramatic step of just fixing the regulations causing the supply problem? Something like, oh, only requiring 250 hours to be a first officer (commercial pilot's license) and keep the 1500 ATP hours for the Captain? That way someone can get experience as an airline pilot while getting paid? Simple supply fix, undo the overreaction in regulations which is causing the supply problem?

      • Is that all true as stated, or is the "$70-80 an hour" back-calculated by taking the annual salary and dividing what it would be for a 40 hour week? Because by your numbers, pilots with seniority make less than the starting wage.

      • Re:Here's a thought: (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Faldgan ( 13738 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:51PM (#56964146) Homepage Journal

        While your statements are factually correct they ignore several critical pieces of information that leaves readers with the wrong impression.
            The $70-$80 is for flight hours, not hours worked.
            You will spend as much time commuting and on preflight and postflight tasks as you will flying.
            You will be on standby for a lot of the non-working time as well, where you can do little else.
            Starting at a major carrier is a mid-career job, not a start of career job. You won't get this job until you have been in the industry for 10 to 15 years.

        Another semi-random note: The pilot experience requirements would not have changed the Colgan crash. The captain had 3379 hours and the first officer had 2244 hours; both were well above the proposed new minimums. I use as a basic standard for good legislation that if a new law is created in response to an incident, the incident must have been prevented if the new law had already been in effect.

      • Near most of the major cities $60k is just above poverty level.

        Minimum wage up poverty lelvel up inflation up. Average wage is down massively

        30 years ago my father earning 60k a year could get a house, two cars, a boat and his wife didn't have to work but made things easier.

        To reach that same level now requires 120k and all college debt being paid.

        My wife will being paying her college debt off right about the time our yet to be born kids go to college. Nursing school sucked and since she is already employe

      • Re:Here's a thought: (Score:4, Interesting)

        by sabri ( 584428 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:57PM (#56964588)
        Mod parent up.

        The issue is requiring 1000-1500 hours of flight time before you can get an ATP certification which is a requirement to work for a commercial passenger airline. Before the changes after the Colgan Air crash you only needed 250 hours to be an FO with a regional carrier.

        Today, many "fresh" pilots (those with a CPL and 250 hours) need to get a CFI and train other pilots in order to get the required experience. That's nothing else than a ponzi scheme. Once they have 1500 hours, they are eligible to fly at the airlines, but by that time they're "too old" and "too demanding".

        Not to mention that a few years ago it was still very common to have young pilots pay to fly. The industry created the problem itself.

    • Here's a thought: they could try paying pilots decently, and giving them reasonable work schedules.

      I know, that's crazy talk.

      That's almost the sort of talk you'd expect if there was a pilot shortage, but it is so far from reality that there obviously isn't a shortage, just a bunch of whiny companies.

      If there was a shortage, they'd be offering free training and guaranteed work schedules.

    • Here's a thought: they could try paying pilots decently, and giving them reasonable work schedules.

      I know, that's crazy talk.

      Paying more would help, but not enough. It's nearly impossible to get trained and enough flight time when you have to borrow to pay for it. Even getting enough PIC time to fly small cargo routes is nearly impossible, and that is just the first step.

      I know of a service that flies banners near where I live. They require you have nearly 500 hours and a commercial rating just to do that part time. Even flying charters takes more time than that, and YOU will be paying for your type rating and minimum hours.

      T

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:43PM (#56963650)

    regional airlines pay very low

    • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:53PM (#56963730)
      ^^^^ This, or so I heard. A friend of mine finally "made it to (national/international airline)" after umpteen years and it was the difference between his wife being the breadwinner and his wife staying at home with the kids.
      • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:09PM (#56963842)

        Whenever there's an article about a shortage of X, it's usually because the pay/conditions of X are terrible, nobody wants to do it FOR THAT WAGE, and thus there's a shortage. But the hope is that somehow this shortage will etiher drum up business for schools/certification, remove regulations that prevent unqualified people from doing the work, or otherwise prevent having to take the revenue that is lost to profit and use it for employees. Really hard to give a flying fuck.

        • by RyoShin ( 610051 )

          Really hard to give a flying fuck.

          Especially right now because it's difficult to find someone to pilot that fuck.

  • Top Gun 2 will boost people into the milltary

  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:47PM (#56963682)

    Airline pilot used to be a prestige job which for a system airline could be a lifetime career. Starting pilots now make $24 an hour, which is slightly higher than a Walmart greeter:
    http://fortune.com/2014/03/03/... [fortune.com]

    Think about that the next time you roar down the runway on your way somewhere.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      Airline pilot used to be a prestige job which for a system airline could be a lifetime career. Starting pilots now make $24 an hour, which is slightly higher than a Walmart greeter: http://fortune.com/2014/03/03/... [fortune.com]

      Think about that the next time you roar down the runway on your way somewhere.

      Your article is about 4 years and $26 per hour out of date [endeavorair.com].

      • Your article is about 4 years and $26 per hour out of date

        We should note though that the $50+ figure is based on limited hours. If we're comparing it with other jobs, we'd want to compare against a 2080 hour work year which sees their pilots earning about $29/hour.

        $29/hour for highly skilled employment with unsociable hours and lots of travel is not high. Add to that the very high training cost.

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )
          According to the FARs(specifically 121.471), no commercial pilot can work more than 100hrs a month or 1000 hours in a calendar year. A person working 40hrs a week, assuming 2 weeks off, works 2000 hours in a calendar year. The average wage for someone with an advanced degree in the US is $70,000. If a pilot were to work at their wage for the standard 2000 hours a year at that $50 an hour rate, they would be making $100-120k a year, well over the average wage. Show me other part-time jobs that pay $50 an
          • Software developer ...
            Doctor ...
            Lawyer ...
            Teacher ... (probably not in the US, though)

          • Show me other part-time jobs that pay $50 an hour.

            Strippers, I mean exotic dancers. And dental hygienist apparently, my cousin’s wife gets paid that much as a dental hygienist but she has to string together work at three dental offices to make it a full time job.

          • It may turn out that even though they're only getting paid for that many hours, the actual time commitment is much higher.

            Other part time jobs only use up part of your time; this is a part time job that uses up all your time.

            It isn't like you can work a typical second part time job from a random airport hotel. All that time is taken up by the job.

            • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

              It isn't like you can work a typical second part time job from a random airport hotel. All that time is taken up by the job.

              Fun Fact: Many pilots have side-jobs (actually, for some pilots senior enough that they can sit reserve and not fly while still getting full pay, "pilot" is their $200k a year side job). They might be away from home 3-5 days at a time (sometimes as long as 9 days for some international trips) but then they could be home for the next 2 weeks straight. plenty of time to have another career. Many own another business of some type.

    • that was when it was all ex navy and air force pilots who were at the top of their HS classes and went to one of the best colleges in the world and had 20 years experience flying planes

      • ...when it was all ex navy and air force pilots

        If you ever get a chance to meet a bunch of carrier aviators... and then get to meet their 'not-so-cool, calm & collected' fundie/Southern fratboy counterparts - i.e. Air Force fighter pilots - you wouldn't even risk mentioning them both in the same sentence.

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

          ...when it was all ex navy and air force pilots

          If you ever get a chance to meet a bunch of carrier aviators... and then get to meet their 'not-so-cool, calm & collected' fundie/Southern fratboy counterparts - i.e. Air Force fighter pilots - you wouldn't even risk mentioning them both in the same sentence.

          Is it really true that while the other branches of the military have their recruits qualify at the rifle range Air Force pilots have to qualify at the driving range?

    • Starting pilots now make $24 an hour, which is slightly higher than a Walmart greeter:

      Pilots have nicer uniforms.

  • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:50PM (#56963706)

    If they were that desperate they would be training pilots themselves.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      If they were that desperate they would be training pilots themselves.

      They are. Jetblue has an ab initio program and other major airlines are following suit with similar programs.

    • This is the answer.

      Every time someone bemoans that there aren't enough X or the X they have aren't good enough, there are two questions to ask: 1) Are you paying people enough to want to do that job?/are the working conditions so shit that nobody wants to do that?, and 2) What are you doing to lower the barrier of entry for people who want in?

      Almost always the problem is that the organization complaining is trying to be cheap.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:50PM (#56963708)
    The situation has gotten absolutely miserable for student pilots, worse than trying to become a doctor in many ways (and that's saying something). And taking that risk (debt) buys you entrance to starving as a regional pilot for many years, until MAYBE you get hired on for a wage that can finally provide a life.

    And then you're still just a bus driver in the sky. Passengers certainly treat it as such, in no small part due to the airlines treating the passengers like cattle. Honestly, I think the whole US air industry is just fucked.
  • I imagine when small markets no longer have air service the political pressure will repeal the 1,500 hour rule with something logical.

    Paying $200,000 for an ATP to work for the regionals is like paying $200,000 for a BS in Poly-Sci to work at Mc Donald’s.

    But, senior pilots are paid very well with good benefits. They (like Sully) are the ones that caused the problem, for no improvement in safety.

  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @02:52PM (#56963722)
    Get rid of the idiotic 1500 hour rule, keep the rules as far as crew rest hours. Both of the pilots in the 2008 crash that precipitated the 1500 hour rule had more than 1500 hours in the cockpit. Most of the world does fine with co-pilots starting with 250 to 500 hours -- this allows them to be trained on the job.
  • ...because they've pushed huge chunks of their route coverage onto regionals that pay very little, all in the name of Profit!

    By pushing it all on the regionals, the majors have lowered expenses, and also push away some of the responsibility.

    What's the result? Worse service.

    Keep at it, Legacy Carriers. Keep diggin' that grave.

  • by BitterOak ( 537666 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:08PM (#56963836)
    Given that the technology exists today to build passenger planes which require no flight crew at all, I can imagine why someone in their late teens/early twenties deciding on a career path would be hesitant to make the HUGE investment of time and money it requires to become a commercial airline pilot. My guess is within ten years, you will start to see automated commercial flights in which the "pilot" doesn't need to touch anything from pushback at the departing gate to pulling up at the arrival gate, and within twenty, you'll start to see flights with no flight crew on board at all. Why would anyone want to start a career in that field now? I think the pilot shortage problem is only going to get worse in the years to come, before automation takes over, and the shortage may accelerate the trend to automation.
    • by DanDD ( 1857066 )

      You are spot on. Pilots will increasingly become IT workers - babysitting the data paths in the cockpit to ensure all the users are happy.

      There will always be a market for special mission pilots - slurry bombers for fire fighting, off-airport operations for remote delivery/rescue, etc, but, those are very small markets.

  • by augustz ( 18082 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:11PM (#56963858)

    There is no shortage of pilots for those $300K/year jobs. Period.

    There is a shortage at the 36K - $40K per year level - especially now that you need 1,500 hours which takes a fair bit of time to get (and $$). Add in quality of life issues at that pay rate - yes there is a shortage.

    Put all the regional pilots on mainline contracts. Pilot shortage would go away pretty quickly.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Exactly this. The options are many, all they need to do is pay enough in some form or another to make the expensive training worthwhile or pay for the training while the new employee is on a training salary.

      This is nothing more than the overpaid "financial geniuses" not just cutting expenses to the bone, but cutting out part of the bone too now complaining that it's hard to walk on a broken bone.

      Rather than planting, they ate the seed corn.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    We dont have enough pilots because of the russians

  • by DanDD ( 1857066 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:20PM (#56963928)

    I just visited with a former US Navy pilot who's been flying for Frontier for the last 20 years. He hates it. Even in some major airlines, pilots are often treated poorly, have poor schedules, and are expected to have no life. This leads to a high rate of "AIDS" - Aviation Induced Divorce Syndrome. Pay has been increasing, but quality of life isn't.

    If you work for an airline, regional or major, you have to establish 'seniority' before you can gain any sense of a normal schedule or choose a base of operations. Until you've establish seniority, a pilot is at the whim of the company. If you change companies, you give up seniority and start at the bottom all over again.

    Federally Regulated Indentured Servitude. What a rewarding career choice. Not.

    The real issues are the MBA mentality, and innovation and competition limiting FAA regulations. The airline industry and the FAA have been in bed together for decades to create regulations that go far beyond safety, and in reality limit competition and innovation. Profit and protecting the status quo comes first, everything else comes second. As a result, the US has seen a real decline in the pace of innovation in aviation. Other markets have seen dramatic increases in innovation, service, and safety. Aviation, not so much (except in safety). Yes, we have more efficient engines, better avionics, and more advanced materials (787 Dreamliner, etc.), but these innovations are in increasingly niche markets.

    General aviation special interest groups like EAA and AOPA are starting to chip away at the FAA/Airline industry monster: Basic Med [aopa.org] is helping hobbyist pilots keep their medicals and continue flying smaller aircraft safely. And, the recent FAA Part 23 regulation re-write [aopa.org] is helping revive general aviation engineering and production in the United States. These are drops in the bucket, but hopefully this trend continues.

  • Stop Right There (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:24PM (#56963968)

    The national security of the United States relies on a healthy airline industry.

    No, it doesn't. That's absurd. The military flies its own shit.

    The economy does, sure. But that's a self-correcting problem (as long as you actually let it self-correct).
    If there's a shortage of pilots, then raise fares to either lower demand or hire more pilots to fill demand.

  • Cost (Score:5, Insightful)

    by darkain ( 749283 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:30PM (#56964016) Homepage

    A pilot's license doesn't make someone an active commercial pilot. I work with a bunch of guys in their 60's who in their youth were hobbyist pilots that would just go and fly for fun out of local airfields. ALL of these airfields are now gone, and the cost to take up a small plane just isn't feasible for a hobbyist anymore.

  • by brian.stinar ( 1104135 ) on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @03:36PM (#56964060) Homepage

    There is no such thing as a shortage, or a surplus. Those two things only exist within a price point, at a specific point in time. With enough money, you could buy ALL the pilots. I am pretty sure the very last pilot would be very expensive. Then, after a few more years, there would be even more pilots, and then they'd be even more expensive. Eventually this would stabilize, as even if there were one extremely rich person with all the money, not everyone could be a pilot. Some people would have to grow food, and work on airplanes.

    This article seems to miss an important point - regional airlines choose not to pay as much for pilots, so they will feel a 'shortage' at or below their preferred price point, for a specific time period.

  • This is perplexing because the pay is so low and pilots have to pool their housing.

  • I hear other jobs have the same issue, loss of job image, after certain poeple enter the employ.

    A recent one turned on his advisors, and on his people, taking a murderer's word over theirs' on international television. That is one job that will never look as special as it did the day before that mindless fool was voted in. Not involving transportation, but it did have a lot lives on the line.

    I have to admit, however, that job did start coming up short on good people that wanted to fill the role properly, a

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Tuesday July 17, 2018 @04:52PM (#56964546)

    We're going to need a bigger boat^h^h^h^hplane.

Get hold of portable property. -- Charles Dickens, "Great Expectations"

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