AA recalls
#371
AA Pilot Retirement Facts: from the APA e-mail blast Aug 5, 2011
Over the last two months, more than 70 pilots have chosen to retire prior to the mandatory retirement age of 65. Over the next five years, more than 700 pilots will reach the mandatory retirement age of 65. Over the next five years, nearly 1,900 more pilots will reach age 60 (full retirement benefits age). By the end of 2020, more than 2,300 pilots will have reached the mandatory retirement age of 65. By the end of 2020, more than 4,400 pilots will have reached age 60.
Over the last two months, more than 70 pilots have chosen to retire prior to the mandatory retirement age of 65. Over the next five years, more than 700 pilots will reach the mandatory retirement age of 65. Over the next five years, nearly 1,900 more pilots will reach age 60 (full retirement benefits age). By the end of 2020, more than 2,300 pilots will have reached the mandatory retirement age of 65. By the end of 2020, more than 4,400 pilots will have reached age 60.
#372
10 Aug class of 18 received a mix - STL 80/767, MIA 76D/73I
24 Aug closed with 24
7 Sep closed with 13
21 Sep class is pending, expecting 18
5 & 19 Oct classes announced
Expect classes to continue 2/month with a 'rolling average' class size of 18, including Nov & Dec.
Junior red (TWA) pilot to be offered recall 9 Nov class.
Then a mix of AE pilots with seniority # and blue (AA) pilots.
Junior furloughed pilot projected to be offered recall March 2012.
Remainder of AE pilots with seniority # offered classes thru July '12
New hires with mix of AE pilots begins.
Disclaimer: This projection is as firm as molten jello.
The math:
24 Aug closed with 24
7 Sep closed with 13
21 Sep class is pending, expecting 18
5 & 19 Oct classes announced
Expect classes to continue 2/month with a 'rolling average' class size of 18, including Nov & Dec.
Junior red (TWA) pilot to be offered recall 9 Nov class.
Then a mix of AE pilots with seniority # and blue (AA) pilots.
Junior furloughed pilot projected to be offered recall March 2012.
Remainder of AE pilots with seniority # offered classes thru July '12
New hires with mix of AE pilots begins.
Disclaimer: This projection is as firm as molten jello.
The math:
- latest acceptance rate ~ 20%
- number of previous deferred now returning is variable
- MLOA number is variable
- projection quality has improved since furloughed pilot telethon
#375
Mink--I may be wrong, but yes they would like to increase the class sizes (I don't know about the 60 number you state), however, they're having trouble getting enough furloughees to return in time for the class date. It takes time to contact all those people by letter/phone, wait up to 21 days for a reply and then get them in the next available class. I'm thinking there is trouble getting people to respond in time, and when they do with a "defer", it's too late to get someone else in it. Just my .02
#376
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 6,430
Likes: 124
From: Window seat
The statement was "they're hiring as many as they can as fast as they can. Ultimately the limit, as currently structured, would be about 60(65?)." (paraphrased) That number was just an educated guess.
The lead time to get spun up, from what I've been told, is measured in months, not weeks. Throw in the 17 months until the A320 shows up, along with a potential(hopefully!) training bubble developing, and they probably need 30 hrs in a day to stay afloat.
Last edited by Sliceback; 08-14-2011 at 08:00 AM. Reason: added paraphrased
#377
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Joined: Jun 2008
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Mink,
The statement was "they're hiring as many as they can as fast as they can. Ultimately the limit, as currently structured, would be about 60(65?)." (paraphrased) That number was just an educated guess.
The lead time to get spun up, from what I've been told, is measured in months, not weeks. Throw in the 17 months until the A320 shows up, along with a potential(hopefully!) training bubble developing, and they probably need 30 hrs in a day to stay afloat.
The statement was "they're hiring as many as they can as fast as they can. Ultimately the limit, as currently structured, would be about 60(65?)." (paraphrased) That number was just an educated guess.
The lead time to get spun up, from what I've been told, is measured in months, not weeks. Throw in the 17 months until the A320 shows up, along with a potential(hopefully!) training bubble developing, and they probably need 30 hrs in a day to stay afloat.
After that period of time, they could have easily ramped up monthly classes to at least 60 if they wanted or needed to. They're training exactly as many as they WANT to train, 35-40/month and until they feel they want to train more for whatever reason, it will stay that way.
They know EXACTLY what they are doing.
#378
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 6,430
Likes: 124
From: Window seat
eaglefly - perhaps, but they also didn't expect to order aircraft from Boeing AND Airbus, which might have really complicated some of the issues they're dealing with.
I wouldn't give them too much credit for knowing "exactly" what they're doing all the time. In any organization outside events, or decisions higher up the food chain, force the folks lower down the list to scramble.
CA Hale made it obvious that they're scrambling to get organized for the a/c deliveries, especially implemented a new fleet with 17 months lead time. He said some events got pushed up by a year. They can't respond to that within a matter of weeks.
I wouldn't give them too much credit for knowing "exactly" what they're doing all the time. In any organization outside events, or decisions higher up the food chain, force the folks lower down the list to scramble.
CA Hale made it obvious that they're scrambling to get organized for the a/c deliveries, especially implemented a new fleet with 17 months lead time. He said some events got pushed up by a year. They can't respond to that within a matter of weeks.
#380
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 366
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10 Aug class of 18 received a mix - STL 80/767, MIA 76D/73I
24 Aug closed with 24
7 Sep closed with 13
21 Sep class is pending, expecting 18
5 & 19 Oct classes announced
Expect classes to continue 2/month with a 'rolling average' class size of 18, including Nov & Dec.
Junior red (TWA) pilot to be offered recall 9 Nov class.
Then a mix of AE pilots with seniority # and blue (AA) pilots.
Junior furloughed pilot projected to be offered recall March 2012.
Remainder of AE pilots with seniority # offered classes thru July '12
New hires with mix of AE pilots begins.
Disclaimer: This projection is as firm as molten jello.
The math:
24 Aug closed with 24
7 Sep closed with 13
21 Sep class is pending, expecting 18
5 & 19 Oct classes announced
Expect classes to continue 2/month with a 'rolling average' class size of 18, including Nov & Dec.
Junior red (TWA) pilot to be offered recall 9 Nov class.
Then a mix of AE pilots with seniority # and blue (AA) pilots.
Junior furloughed pilot projected to be offered recall March 2012.
Remainder of AE pilots with seniority # offered classes thru July '12
New hires with mix of AE pilots begins.
Disclaimer: This projection is as firm as molten jello.
The math:
- latest acceptance rate ~ 20%
- number of previous deferred now returning is variable
- MLOA number is variable
- projection quality has improved since furloughed pilot telethon
Total recalled - 1021
Total Deferring - 812
= 1832 pilots offered a recall
Therefore, I come up with a 55.7% acceptance rate (1021/1832).
Someone help me out...
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