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Old 11-02-2021 | 05:44 AM
  #55  
ZeroTT
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Originally Posted by pitchattitude
Much of what you say is true. But there will always be people willing to stay at the smaller carriers because they develop the quality of life they desire through seniority. There may be small variations in the percentages of those that want to do this at a given carrier and true Skywest does have the largest TOTAL number of those people, but probably not a significantly larger percentage. There is, however, an economy of scale that does favor larger carriers and AAG has in the past few years, even before the pandemic, stated their plan and followed through with that plan, of fewer smaller carriers and instead have a few larger carriers. Skywest is certainly the biggest and I don’t doubt that it will survive, especially because it flies for all four major carriers. I don’t doubt that there will be some consolation, just like has happened with the majors over the years. The strong survive and the others either are merged and consumed or just fade away.

Whether or not you intended it to be an argument FOR the survival of the regionals, it is. A few, smaller, carriers will fail to be sustainable and the majors will realize they have to spend more money to keep things going. It may require more investment directly in the regionals and those regionals being wholly owned, or more “mega regionals” similar to Skywest. I still contend that the regional model will still survive because even at a higher price point, it is well below what that smaller gauge feed can be operated by mainline.
if this were happening slower, maybe. But covid was a perfectly timed workforce whipsaw. You had 18 months of above average retirements and zero new hiring that is all re-equilibrating at once.


”some people” staying isn’t going to make the wheels turn. this is the equivalent of “why do you lose 95% of climb capability with 50% loss of thrust”.


There’s going to be a rapid, dramatic loss of regional lift. Potentially a transient loss but how long can the majors tolerate substantial constraints? How fast can you retrain 145 captains onto the 175? How fast can you move CRJ-550’s onto a new certificate?

The loss of regional lift is coupled to (and caused by) a dramatic need to hire … from the regionals.

Maybe the whole industry doesn’t collapse, but dramatic changes are coming
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