San Antonio Express-News

Airlines add buses amid pilot shortages

- By Mary Schlangens­tein

U.S. airlines are facing a pilot shortage that’s complicati­ng efforts to ramp up flights, forcing them to step up training programs, recruit foreign pilots and even replace planes with buses.

The industry needs to hire an average of 14,500 new pilots each year until 2030, according to federal labor statistics. But carriers say there’s no way they can bring on that many due to long lag times for credential­ing. Worse, experts say the staffing bottleneck is unlikely to end anytime soon.

“The pilot shortage for the industry is real and most airlines are simply not going to be able to realize their capacity plans because there simply aren’t enough pilots, at least not for the next five-plus years,” said Scott Kirby, chief executive officer of United Airlines Holdings Inc. That will likely force United to keep 150 regional

planes parked despite increased domestic travel demand, he said.

The issue isn’t new — airlines already faced difficulty finding and retaining pilots before the pandemic — but a purging of employees at the start of the downturn in 2020 has left the industry ill-prepared for a rebound.

Thousands of pilots accepted buyouts or retired early when federal aid to avoid furloughs failed to cover all the airlines’ labor costs, especially for veteran pilots earning six-figure salaries.

Two years on, airlines are unable to find enough qualified crews to fully reinstate route maps.

“This is going to be one of the biggest constraint­s for the industry going forward,” Alaska Air Group Inc. Chief Executive Ben Minicucci said on an April 21 call.

Airlines have scaled back plans for a rapid resumption of pre-pandemic flight schedules. United expects flying this quarter to be down 13 percent from 2019, while Delta Air Lines Inc. projects a 16 percent decline, American Airlines Group Inc. as much as 8 percent and Alaska Air, about 9 percent. Jetblue Airways Corp. is trimming 10 percent of its planned summer flights.

The problem is most acute at regional airlines, where pilot ranks have been depleted by hiring at larger carriers. A beggarthy-neighbor strategy has left smaller aircraft idle and cut flights dedicated to shorter routes.

“We don’t have the regional aircraft flying the summer right now [that] we would like,” American’s CEO, Robert Isom, told CNBC last week. “This is a fantastic opportunit­y for people that want to come in and fly planes. They can make a lot of money.”

Regional airlines play a critical role in ferrying passengers from smaller markets to hub airports where they board flights operated by larger partners. These work horses of the industry have capacity purchase agreements binding them to one or more primary airlines such as American or Delta, which control scheduling, pricing and ticketing.

In lieu of puddle-jumper flights, some airlines are linking

up with charter bus services. United and American have contracted with Landline Co., a Colorado-based startup, to ferry passengers and their bags by motorcoach on some shorter routes, allowing them to sell destinatio­ns where they don’t fly.

 ?? Joe Raedle / Getty Images ?? American has contracted with a Colorado-based startup to ferry passengers by motorcoach on some shorter routes.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images American has contracted with a Colorado-based startup to ferry passengers by motorcoach on some shorter routes.

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