fly4unclesam
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2005
- Posts
- 47
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Didn't think of it that way but hey, you must be a 'half-full' type, right?Your seniority at your future airline just jumped about 3 years. Stagnation will happen, so that will work out for you.
.... I think CAL is probably 50/50 growth and retirements and NWA is mostly retirements. Obviously airlines won't hire as many now that they won't have as many retiring, but the hiring will continue and in 5 years we will once again see the numbers get big.....
I suspect that the most guys are going to work until they're 65, or close to it. They'll look at their retirement, the top pay they are getting now, and the prospect of sitting around the house watching their wife knit and say, "ehhh.. I'll fly a bit more, just throw the money in the retirement..." then all the sudden they're 65...How many of the guys approaching 60 will just retire anyways or retire after 61? I have heard a lot of pilots approaching 60 say "I am going to retire at 60 regardless!!" In reality I would expect a lot of those pilots to go against what they say and continue to fly past 60. I could see some of the pilots only fly until 62 or 63 and then say I cant take it anymore and retire prior to 65. If you retire prior to 65 now would there be any penalty for your pension( the lucky ones that still have one that is) that would make them want to fly until 65 vs. retiring at 63 or 64??
I suspect that the most guys are going to work until they're 65, or close to it. They'll look at their retirement, the top pay they are getting now, and the prospect of sitting around the house watching their wife knit and say, "ehhh.. I'll fly a bit more, just throw the money in the retirement..." then all the sudden they're 65...
Certainly some will retire at 60 as long as the unions bargain to keep 60 as the "normal" retirement age but many will stay so it will be difficult to predict the effects on seniority progression. Especially if 65 becomes the new "normal" retirement age in airline contracts. Then most will not be able to afford the penalties involved with retireing early. Especially the loss of "bridge" medical benefits.
it all depends on how its worded in your contract. is normal retirement worded as age 60 or is it worded as the retirement age as defined in FAR.....? if it is the first case, I say the union doesn't have to negotiate anything, it states age 60 for unreduced normal retirement.
We FOs need to prepare for the next battle - Ensuring full retirement is available at 60 vs 65. I bet all our companies are already crunching #s on how much they can save by reducing our contributions and spreading them out over 5 more years....![]()
I am an AF pilot with about 4 years until I can retire. With "Age 65" now law, I assume that airline hiring at most carriers will drastically slow down for some time. Do you think it will take 5 years for the system to "catch back up" and pilot hiring start again?
Thanks
I have heard a lot of pilots approaching 60 say "I am going to retire at 60 regardless!!" In reality I would expect a lot of those pilots to go against what they say and continue to fly past 60.