Lear70
JAFFO
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2003
- Posts
- 7,487
I wasn't talking about cabotage. I was talking about a U.S. Ab Initio program. The future, if the FAA ANPRM turns into a NPRM without changes and then is written into FAR's as-proposed, would look something like this:Wait a second--aren't the payrates higher at most of the foreign carriers than they are at the US airlines. Last time I checked, most of the Foreign Majors were hiring US pilots to counteract a pilot shortage over there--not the other way around.
We are actually the ones exerting downward pressure of they're wages. China, India, etc can't turn out enough pilots in their own homeland to meet the growing demand for air travel over there so it is silly to think that they will flood our market and lower the bar.
Next 3-5 years, nothing changes, industry continues to slowly improve, ASM's are roughly flat across the board at most airlines, a few LCC's as notable exceptions (AAI, Allegiant), but the only real hiring occurs for attrition from age 65 as it starts to come into focus.
Next 2-3 years, aviation up-swing, the Majors finally have to start picking people up in a major way, AA's retirements hit hard, lots of recalls, we basically get all the guys and gals on the streets back into cockpits, then we start to go through the high-time Regional Captains as they get picked up at the Majors.
The Regionals start to upgrade again, and go to hire F/O's to replace the upgrading pilots. The pilots from some of the 3rd tier freight operators, charter operators, higher-time CFI's that have been hanging out instructing for years, etc finally get a Regional slot, and the 3rd tier freight operators upgrade THEIR F/O's, then look to replace them and find...
Not a whole lot of anything to replace them with. This will be the first signal that there's an impending "pilot shortage".
Then another 3-5 years of not much hiring, normal down-cycle (assuming no economic screwups again), then we swing into a 2-3 year hiring cycle again. The Majors have no real issues in hiring, but the Regionals, on the other hand, have a real problem finding pilots. To the point that they can't staff. They start screaming bloody murder through the ATA. "Whatever will we do?" they cry, and people listen because, unless something changes dramatically in Scope take-backs over the next decade, Regionals will still be flying between 30-50% of all Flag operations, just like they do now.
They'll start pushing to use that loophole in the FAR's that's currently being proposed: "Special Air Crew Training in lieu of obtaining an ATP". Voila. U.S. Ab Initio training is born.
You have to look further down the road than most pilots think of, which is why ALPA is trying to gear up to battle the FAA's proposal by trying to lobby for the successful passage of HR.3371.
Sorry so lengthy, but you have to think long-term to understand the danger. We really WILL be in a pilot shortage in about 12-15 years unless, in the next decade, high school and college kids start seriously pursuing aviation again for a career, which isn't likely unless our salaries and QOL bounces back. I'd like to nip this loophole in the bud if possible, for the future of our industry.