Airline pilot shortage coverage on NPR
#41
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2008
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I am getting really tired of the arguement coming from Cohen and others that flight instructing is the same hour over and over again until you hit 1500. Yes, as an instructor I spent quite a bit of time "banging the pattern", but you know what else I did even more? Teaching and demonstrating stall/spin entry and recovery. Considering that Colgan 3407 went down because of improper stall recovery (CA reconfigured the aircraft by calling for gear up, and the FO threw the flaps up on her own) then perhaps a few more of this "same" hour over and over again might have been a not such a bad idea.
#42
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 174
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What airline starts at $15,000 a year. I made $26,000 my 1st year at a regional and that was back in 1997. Don't 2nd year FO's at most regionals make close to $40 at most regionals these days? Not saying it shouldn't be more but for a job not requiring a degree good luck making $40,000 if you are 20 years old and have no degree. If you wasted $150K at UND or ERAU than that is your own fault. There are much cheaper ways to do it.
#43
The experience gained while CFIing is some of the best you will ever get. Most who did it will know this to be the case. I flew with a lot of FO's over the years and I'll take a seasoned CFII/MEI anyday over someone who just went and bought 500/1000/1500 hours of time buzzing around.
#44
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: May 2010
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True. I'm on my 3rd regional in 5 years due to being furloughed. And I'm gonna get furloughed again. This business is a joke. I just barely made under $40K this year. Majors need to decide who they want flying for them and stick with it. Whipsawing should be illegal.
#45
Line Holder
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 1,753
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All i know is, regionals can't get pilots like they use to. We don't have places like Jet U and ATP grads who can go to the regionals with 400 hrs anymore. Private loans are not given out for flight training (unless you go to a college and get your training that way) Not many people are getting their Private's certificate compared to 5-10 years ago. 135 outfit flying bank checks aren't around anymore. So building time is harder than it use to be. I'm not saying there will be a pilot shortage, but what I've listed is hinting there will be one.
#46
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2008
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All i know is, regionals can't get pilots like they use to. We don't have places like Jet U and ATP grads who can go to the regionals with 400 hrs anymore. Private loans are not given out for flight training (unless you go to a college and get your training that way) Not many people are getting their Private's certificate compared to 5-10 years ago. 135 outfit flying bank checks aren't around anymore. So building time is harder than it use to be. I'm not saying there will be a pilot shortage, but what I've listed is hinting there will be one.
#47
Bracing for Fallacies
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 3,543
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From: In favor of good things, not in favor of bad things
#48
What airline starts at $15,000 a year. I made $26,000 my 1st year at a regional and that was back in 1997. Don't 2nd year FO's at most regionals make close to $40 at most regionals these days? Not saying it shouldn't be more but for a job not requiring a degree good luck making $40,000 if you are 20 years old and have no degree. If you wasted $150K at UND or ERAU than that is your own fault. There are much cheaper ways to do it.
The 1900 rates published now are 14.4 to 15.7k. Effectively that is roughly 20% less than in 1997. Even 30ish seat TP rates at 15.7 to 20.7 are 10% lower than the old 1900 rate.
Interestingly, Caravan rates have stayed fairly flat. Mountain Air (who is always hiring) starts 'Van drivers at 34.4k.
I never said it did but no matter how you look at it I look at it as money coming in, aka as income. When you do your monthly budget to you not factor in per diem as money coming in to offset expenses? No matter what your job is you have to eat and food is rarely free no matter where you work. I probably eat free more than my friends who have normal day jobs. Rarely pay for a meal unless its on a layover. Also, I get a huge tax write off each year by itemizing my per diem. 1st year pay at most regionals is around $23/hour so that over $20K, not $15K. Not sure why people arguing the low pay always have to embellish and exaggerate it.
Not sure why people arguing about low pay always have to talk about how much they made "back in my day."
#49
#50
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Joined: Dec 2012
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1. There will be no pilot shortage. There won't even be a shortage of people willing to fly jets for 4-800 dollar paychecks every two weeks. Just because airlines are doing limited hiring doesn't mean there will ever be a shortage and everyone will have jobs now. Need more evidence? They don't even hire mostly CFIs anymore, because prior 121 guys are beating the doors down.
2. It is nearly impossible in today's instructing climate to get 1,500 hours in a reasonable time frame, and to get the cross country. You'd have to work at ATP, and there is an 8 month backlog to get into standardizations after you graduate. I work at a very high volume school, because 141 foreign ab initio is one of the few ways to get any hours at all besides ATP, and the syllabus and scheduling does not support going out and turning their training into scenario based cross countries. That's most of these forieng ab initio places.
The 'bah humbugs' of older more experienced pilots regarding the difficulties experienced by new pilots are out of ignorance. There's never been a generation faced with what we are. I look forward to learning how to be a better pilot from you guys one day....if I ever get a 141 job. I've been 300 hours from even the potential of meeting mins for 12 months. They raise them as I get them.
2. It is nearly impossible in today's instructing climate to get 1,500 hours in a reasonable time frame, and to get the cross country. You'd have to work at ATP, and there is an 8 month backlog to get into standardizations after you graduate. I work at a very high volume school, because 141 foreign ab initio is one of the few ways to get any hours at all besides ATP, and the syllabus and scheduling does not support going out and turning their training into scenario based cross countries. That's most of these forieng ab initio places.
The 'bah humbugs' of older more experienced pilots regarding the difficulties experienced by new pilots are out of ignorance. There's never been a generation faced with what we are. I look forward to learning how to be a better pilot from you guys one day....if I ever get a 141 job. I've been 300 hours from even the potential of meeting mins for 12 months. They raise them as I get them.
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