South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Virus grounds budding dreams

Pilots just starting out most at risk as airlines expected to make cuts

- By Niraj Chokshi The New York Times

Joshua Weinstein always wanted to be an airline pilot, but the industry was in crisis when he started college in 2002, so he became a middle school teacher instead.

He loved that job, but after a decade of flying in his free time at a cost of tens of thousands of dollars, Weinstein began hearing more about a looming pilot shortage and left the classroom in 2018 to pursue his dream.

In January, he started training to fly for ExpressJet, which operates regional flights for United Airlines. But the coronaviru­s pandemic, which devastated the airline business, could thin the ranks of pilots by the thousands and has already put the nascent careers of people like Weinstein on hold.

“The worst part right now is that the only thing we know is that nobody knows anything,” he said.

For years, flight schools, airlines and experts encouraged people like Weinstein to become pilots. They promised young recruits a job that was lucrative and secure because thousands of pilots in their late 50s and early 60s would retire in the coming years and de

Nielsen has umpired television’s winners and losers since the medium was new. Who won the West Coast? Who lost in late night? For decades, the entertainm­ent industry has relied on the ratings giant to measure the value of everything from “All in t h e Fa mi l y ” to “Yo u n g Sheldon.”

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