Atlas Air Hiring
Hiring
What’s the latest with hiring at Southern and Atlas, struggling to fill classes or still fine with the current crop of regional pilots?
I heard they are looking at Aussie pilots on the E3 visa again, however It’s just what I heard from somebody, don’t know how true it is. I presume there is a lot of unhappiness though within the group regarding the new contract so people will move on.
Does anybody expect mass resignations or any kind of difficulty for the Atlas group to maintain the current numbers they have?
I heard they are looking at Aussie pilots on the E3 visa again, however It’s just what I heard from somebody, don’t know how true it is. I presume there is a lot of unhappiness though within the group regarding the new contract so people will move on.
Does anybody expect mass resignations or any kind of difficulty for the Atlas group to maintain the current numbers they have?
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Joined APC: Mar 2013
Posts: 393
A couple years ago on a company crew call, the previous CEO(Flynn) was asked a question about hiring, which he mentioned something about lowering hiring minimums to attract “quality candidates”. On a follow up question, a pilot asked “Do you think it’s safe to operate these aircraft in the environment that we do with a bunch of low time pilots”, or something to that effect. The response from Flynn was “It doesn’t matter if a pilot has 1500 hours or 15,000 hours…an ATP is an ATP and fully qualified to do this job.”
That tells you safety is not a concern for them…staffing the airline is all they care about and they will go as low as legally allowed to. Thankfully the FAA requires an ATP at least or they would be hiring pilots straight out of flight school.
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Joined APC: Dec 2019
Posts: 114
Agreed... especially with the way the pay scales are set up. There's a big bump between years 2 to 3 and 3 to 4.
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Joined APC: Dec 2019
Posts: 114
What’s the latest with hiring at Southern and Atlas, struggling to fill classes or still fine with the current crop of regional pilots?
I heard they are looking at Aussie pilots on the E3 visa again, however It’s just what I heard from somebody, don’t know how true it is. I presume there is a lot of unhappiness though within the group regarding the new contract so people will move on.
Does anybody expect mass resignations or any kind of difficulty for the Atlas group to maintain the current numbers they have?
I heard they are looking at Aussie pilots on the E3 visa again, however It’s just what I heard from somebody, don’t know how true it is. I presume there is a lot of unhappiness though within the group regarding the new contract so people will move on.
Does anybody expect mass resignations or any kind of difficulty for the Atlas group to maintain the current numbers they have?
Where O where should Atlas be getting its pilots, according to you? FedEx, Delta, United etc hire pilots right out of the regionals by the way...
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Sep 2013
Posts: 840
I don't believe that this was implied in any way, at least not by me. For a regional guy, Atlas might potentially be a great career opportunity, adventure, change, or a stepping stone, simple as that.
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Joined APC: Sep 2014
Posts: 737
I love that we have hired so many because they know how a union is supposed to work, they know how a training dept is supposed to work, they know their way around an FMS, they know how LAX, SFO, SEA, ORD, DFW, JFK, ATL and MIA work in all weather conditions.
There's a very ignorant prejudice against them simply because they haven't been to China or flown a widebody.
Big deal. That takes about 3-6 months on the line to build new habits.
I'm a relatively senior 747 Capt with zero regional experience but you'll never hear me giving a regional pilot a bad rap.
I love that we have hired so many because they know how a union is supposed to work, they know how a training dept is supposed to work, they know their way around an FMS, they know how LAX, SFO, SEA, ORD, DFW, JFK, ATL and MIA work in all weather conditions.
There's a very ignorant prejudice against them simply because they haven't been to China or flown a widebody.
Big deal. That takes about 3-6 months on the line to build new habits.
I love that we have hired so many because they know how a union is supposed to work, they know how a training dept is supposed to work, they know their way around an FMS, they know how LAX, SFO, SEA, ORD, DFW, JFK, ATL and MIA work in all weather conditions.
There's a very ignorant prejudice against them simply because they haven't been to China or flown a widebody.
Big deal. That takes about 3-6 months on the line to build new habits.
Like you I have seen some very experienced operators who have a lot more flying skill than a ‘Heavy’ pilot that hardly flies that often.
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Jul 2017
Posts: 1,409
I'm a relatively senior 747 Capt with zero regional experience but you'll never hear me giving a regional pilot a bad rap.
I love that we have hired so many because they know how a union is supposed to work, they know how a training dept is supposed to work, they know their way around an FMS, they know how LAX, SFO, SEA, ORD, DFW, JFK, ATL and MIA work in all weather conditions.
There's a very ignorant prejudice against them simply because they haven't been to China or flown a widebody.
Big deal. That takes about 3-6 months on the line to build new habits.
I love that we have hired so many because they know how a union is supposed to work, they know how a training dept is supposed to work, they know their way around an FMS, they know how LAX, SFO, SEA, ORD, DFW, JFK, ATL and MIA work in all weather conditions.
There's a very ignorant prejudice against them simply because they haven't been to China or flown a widebody.
Big deal. That takes about 3-6 months on the line to build new habits.
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