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Captains With As Little As 4.5 Months Seniority Are Getting To Fly Delta's Boeing 757/767
Delta Air Lines is opening up the captaincy for its widebody Boeing fleet to less senior pilots as it contends with the ongoing US pilot shortage. As first reported by Aero Crew News, pilots with as little as 4.5 months of seniority can now bid to become captains on a Delta Boeing 757 or Boeing 767, far lower than the industry standard (simpleflying.com) More...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
I new that pilot he was the exception not the rule.
The standards of Delta is world's away from that of Atlas Air on all sorts of levels.
" We’re also extremely proud of the fact that we train some of the Air Force’s most elite aircrews, including the pilots and flight engineers of the U.S. President’s Air Force One and the flight crew members assigned to the E-4B National Airborne Operations Center.",
https://www.atlasair.com/passenger-services/military-charters-humanitarian-missions/,
not exactly small fry in the big pond and they seem to have been around for a while.
Might also beg the question, How many pentagon/USAF wigs own AAWW stock for that to be a seemingly no compete contract since?,
"Under the five-year extension of the agreement, which Atlas Air has held since 2007"
https://www.globenewswire.com/en/news-release/2022/11/07/2549611/34720/en/Atlas-Air-Awarded-Extension-of-Air-Force-One-Pilot-Training-Agreement.html
Just sayin' nobody's perfect and when I said "Hopefully DAL is diligent about the backgrounds"
it was what I meant to say.
https://www.atlasair.com/passenger-services/military-charters-humanitarian-missions/,
not exactly small fry in the big pond and they seem to have been around for a while.
Might also beg the question, How many pentagon/USAF wigs own AAWW stock for that to be a seemingly no compete contract since?,
"Under the five-year extension of the agreement, which Atlas Air has held since 2007"
https://www.globenewswire.com/en/news-release/2022/11/07/2549611/34720/en/Atlas-Air-Awarded-Extension-of-Air-Force-One-Pilot-Training-Agreement.html
Just sayin' nobody's perfect and when I said "Hopefully DAL is diligent about the backgrounds"
it was what I meant to say.
Wikipedia reports these 25 year old warhorses are the oldest WB in Delta's fleet, routes are likely not the best, so apparently bidding by senior pilots isn't happening. As the article notes, seniority at a particular mainline carrier doesn't equate to flying experience - depending on Delta's demographics and training, shouldn't be a safety problem.
Not just Delta. Less senior guys are also on the 767s at United.
I know a few folks who went straight from E-175 at a regional to 757/767 FO at UA. ~30 years old. Super happy for them - crazy how the industry has changed in a relatively short amount of time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_Air_Flight_3591
https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/Pages/DCA19MA086.aspx