2.7 C
Ottawa
Sunday, November 24, 2024

Spirit Airlines adds new university partner to beef up pilot training pipeline as shortage persists

Date:

A Spirit Airlines plane takes off at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, June 1, 2023.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

Mario Tama | Getty Images

Spirit Airlines on Thursday said it will partner with Liberty University, the 10th school that it’s working with, to help beef up a pilot training pipeline as the industry continues to face a shortfall of aviators.

The program will allow students pursuing aviation degrees at the university’s School of Aeronautics in Lynchburg, Virginia, to apply to the company’s pipeline program after completing their sophomore year. Prospective trainees will need a recommendation from a faculty member before being eligible to begin the program.

Students working toward an aviation degree can get conditional job offers as they finish their studies and work on accruing flight hours. They must then complete airline pilot training programs, joining as first officers.

“We put a lot of hard work into developing the Spirit Wings Pilot Pathway Program and assembling a great group of partners making it incredibly rewarding to reach this key milestone,” Ryan Rodosta, senior director of flight operations and system chief pilot at Spirit, said in a press release.

Other carriers have also sought to increase their supply of new pilots. U.S. commercial airline pilots can only fly until age 65 under U.S. law. A surge in retirements and buyouts during the Covid-19 pandemic have exacerbated a shortfall, particularly at regional carriers.

JetBlue announced last month that its Gateway Rotor Transition Program will teach U.S.-military trained helicopter pilots to transition to airline pilots. More than 10% of JetBlue’s new pilot hires in 2023 are expected to come from one of its Gateway programs, JetBlue said at the time.

In February 2020, United Airlines purchased a flight academy in an effort to hire more than 10,000 new pilots within the decade.

Airlines are incentivized to train new pilots using pipeline programs. U.S. law requires pilots to receive 1,500 hours of training to fly with commercial airlines. Exceptions exist for some, such as U.S. military-trained pilots and those who attend two- and four-year programs that include flight training.

know more

Popular

More like this
Related

The most you should pay for housing if you earn $80,000 a year

For many Americans, housing costs aren't just another expense...

At 17, he bought a sandwich shop for $125,000—he renamed it Jersey Mike’s and just sold it for $8 billion

When Peter Cancro bought Mike's Subs as a 17-year-old with a...

33-year-old once worked 100-hour weeks to save $40,000 for his robotics startup—now it’s worth $633 million

This story is part of CNBC Make It's The Moment series,...

Arteta shifted ‘deadwood’, transformed Arsenal and helped fans become ‘annoyed and shocked’

Mikel Arteta has transformed Arsenal so of course the supporters are still backing him, while the tactical differences at Liverpool are laid bare. Send your thoughts to theeditor@football365.com. English no more There is not a single Manchester United player in the England squad . I am not even English, and this seems unnatural. The club