BRINGING YOU THE LATEST TALK
FROM AROUND THE SQUADRONS
BY
SCOTT WOLFF
14 December 2018 //^ http://www.combataircraft.net
T
HERE IS A well-documented
pilot shortage in the ranks
of all military aviation
components in the US.
Though the US Air Force and
its reserve components have
been hit the hardest of all, the US Navy
is also feeling the e ects in a big way.
A lot of talk has been heard about
possible solutions, many of which revolve
around the concept of throwing more
money at pilots. However, the consensus
in the community is this: incentivizing a
ghter pilot’s time in hopes of keeping
them in the service is not the solution.
While everyone loves a good bonus and
a pay raise, that is only one of several
components to a long-term solution, and
arguably one of the smaller ones.
To be clear, this is not a new issue.
As has been said before by industry
experts, both military and civilian alike,
there’s always been a cycle to numbers
in the airlines and in the ranks of military
aviation. While one may be feasting, the
other is experiencing more of a famine.
What makes things di erent now is that
both are rapidly approaching an extreme
state of resource depletion.
Airline retirements are near record
levels. With more than 15,000 retirements
expected in the next three to ve years,
commercial air carriers are legitimately
concerned about their ability to ll seats in
the cockpit. The largest problem is there
are not enough quali ed applicants in the
hiring pool and the military is no longer a
stable provider of transitioning aviators.
Navy seeks a solution
In its continuing e orts to combat the
retention and readiness problems, the
US Navy is instituting a program which
creates an opportunity for pilots and naval
ight o cers to stay in service as ight
instructors later in their careers, side-
stepping the sea/shore duty rotation more
common to the service.
On September 28, the o ce of the
Chief of Naval Operations released
a memo through o cial NAVADMIN
channels, announcing the creation of
the aviation professional ight instructor
(PFI) billet. The scope of the PFI program
is speci cally geared towards retention,
as well as the di cult challenge of
maintaining combat-readiness in this
present time of resource depletion
a ecting the naval aviation community.
Naval Air Systems Command’s (NAVAIR’s)
ability to adequately sta operational
ying billets, as well as pipeline instructor
positions, is severely crippled because
of the pilot shortage. The navy has
committed to improving readiness in
NAVY
AIMS AT
READINESS
AND
RETENTION
There has
been a lot of
talk about possible
solutions, many of
which revolve around
the concept of throwing
more money at pilots