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Transport committee Could I speak on that?
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee I think with the thousands and thousands of kids we've taken up for flights, they see it as a free flight. We have found with our program that it's the parents who are the hindrance. When the child says they want to become a pilot, their natural reaction is, “You're going to cras
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee Are you referring to a cadet program?
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee Yes, but I believe the military also has a shortage of pilots for exactly the same reason—instructors. They can't get them in fast enough.
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee Financially, you have to give an incentive. If you have a retired airline pilot who is invited to come back to the airline to teach in simulators, they will make $70 an hour. We were talking about this earlier. If you offered to have them go into a flight school, they would make
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee —but if you made that a tax-free income for them, they would all flood in. Pilots are the cheapest people you can meet in the world.
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee If you offered a pilot $30 an hour and it was tax-free, it would be the same as making $70, and you would probably have a huge percentage of retiring pilots going into these flight schools. They love working with the younger kids. They like seeing them fly. They love being in air
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee You're still “captain”.
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee I think it has increased. I believe that it has helped the safety aspect. I fly solo into Oshkosh, which for a week is the busiest airport in the world, and if my ForeFlight ever crashed as I was coming in there, I'd be lost. I'd turn around and head towards the lake.
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee Yes. I think that what you see in the difference in generations is actually not a lack of motivation. I think people still want to fly, and the waiting lists for flying schools attest to that. What the airlines find is that the skill sets they come in with are a little bit differ
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee I would. On the idea of flight attendants, I personally know over 15 flight attendants who have become pilots and who are working their way up, but they've had to do it totally on their own. There is no incentive for an airline to do their own training. Concerning the shortage
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee I think that if we can set up programs at the high school level, where students who are not that familiar with airports.... As urban areas have expanded, we've lost the small airports and general aviation. People don't see airplanes flying around, and our youth can't look up and
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee That's an issue I am familiar with, because out of the graduates, only about 40% actually stay in aviation. A lot of them whom I know first-hand do not want to go up into the north, especially when they're from the large urban areas. They go up there and spend a couple of years.
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield
Transport committee Thank you. My personal involvement as a pilot started 39 years ago and has continued in general aviation. The Hadfield family spans over 60 years in aviation, with three generations and four captains at Air Canada and with backgrounds as flying instructors, flying surveys up in
December 11th, 2018Committee meeting
Robin Hadfield