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Despite the prestige,
glamour, and career opportunities associated with being
an aviator, the Air Force will likely be battling its
severe pilot shortage for years, as the service has
found the shortage resistant to easy fixes. Moreover,
the shortfall is concentrated almost totally in the
corps of experienced pilots, the ones most valuable
and most difficult to replace.
Some reasons for the shortage are familiar. A booming
economy creates lucrative private-sector job opportunities,
while quality-of-life concerns, such as excessive deployments,
family disruption, and frequent moves, have spurred
pilots to leave the force at rates higher than expected.
However, other factors also are driving pilots from
the service. For starters, each aircraft tasked to
support an ongoing contingency operation-frequently,
they are fighters-has only a limited number of experienced
pilots available to it. New deployment patterns that
some consider overuse affect these pilots most. One
study found half the total pilot shortage is in fighters,
approaching 20 percent of requirements.
The high operations tempo of recent years combined
with the force drawdown after the Cold War have created
deployment levels many pilots have found unacceptable
over the long-term.
The Air Force made "a conscious decision to keep
cockpits at 100 percent," while deliberately understaffing
management positions reserved for pilots, because flying
is the service's primary mission, said Col. Jim Brooks,
chief of the Air Force's operational training division
at the Pentagon, in an interview.
The unusual peacetime pilot shortage is not expected
to fully dissipate until after 2010, according to the
service. The problem has shown some short-term improvement,
as the current 1,200 pilot shortage is 300 less than
the service projected a year ago. Officials cite two
reasons for optimism: The creation of the Aerospace
Expeditionary Force structure last year, which restored
some predictability to pilots' lives, while a recently
approved increase in aviator continuation pay is expected
to address some financial concerns.
No Quick Fixes
Wide-ranging efforts by the Air Force to eliminate
the persistent shortages appear to have temporarily
stemmed growth in the shortfall. However, the Air Force
is going to have to live with the problem for quite
a while. That is the conclusion of "The Air Force
Pilot Shortage: A Crisis for Operational Units?"-a
new study prepared by Rand under Air Force contract.
It predicts that the problem indefinitely will continue
to produce shortages in staff positions and threaten
pilot experience levels in operational units.
The problem is that the easiest solution-retaining
more pilots-has not proved possible in the current
economic and geopolitical world. Efforts to improve
quality of life-including the creation of the Expeditionary
Aerospace Force-and reform of pay, benefit, and retirement
packages have all shown potential to keep pilots in
uniform, yet the problem persists.
Higher pay and bonuses alone will not fix the problem,
as analysis has shown pilots essentially lose lifetime
income with every year they remain on active duty instead
of leaving for airlines-even when enhanced bonuses
and retirement income are taken into account.
Ironically, the services during the drawdown of the
1990s reduced new pilot production at the same time
that worldwide deployments began to dramatically increase.
Now, there are too few pilots in the pipeline to fill
the pilot rosters because larger classes of pilots
have become eligible for separation from the service.
Also, "the shortfall is most critical among those
who collectively must fill key staff and cockpit jobs
and provide instruction and leadership to newcomers
in operational and training units," Rand notes
in the report.
Therefore, boosting the number of new pilot trainees
will not fix the problem.
Large increases in pilot production, the simplest
supply-side solution, have the undesirable side effects
of harming overall pilot experience levels. "Experienced" pilots
are forced to fly an ever greater share of unit flying
hours the more new pilots are trained, meaning inexperienced
pilots take even longer to gain the necessary flying
hours to be considered experienced and move into staff
or leadership positions.
It currently takes nearly three years for a pilot
to become experienced. The time required could grow
longer than a typical assignment if young pilots are
limited in their flying hours by the unavailability
of senior pilots to train them. Pilots would then be
facing new assignments before they were considered
ready to assume new responsibilities.
Rand found that the most vexing issue facing today's
Air Force is not a shortage of pilots in staff positions
but general lack of experienced pilots in the force.
Rand calls the problem "serious enough to compromise
the ability of fighter units to accomplish their primary
missions and meet their [Aerospace] Expeditionary Force
... demands."
The Air Force thus far has been able to fill all of
its cockpits. For this reason, some critics have complained
that the "pilot shortage" is an Air Force
fabrication. They argue that USAF is seeking additional
funding to address a problem that is, in actuality,
a "paper shortage."
The authors of the Rand study disagree with the claim.
So does Gen. Richard E. Hawley, the retired former
commander of USAF's Air Combat Command. "It's
a bogus argument to say this is a manufactured shortage," said
Hawley, noting that having pilots in staff positions,
not just flying aircraft, gives officers needed management
experience.
Insatiable Airlines
Serving to drive flying officers from the service
is a factor that is unique to pilots-the lure of airline
jobs. The market for commercial airline pilots is currently
large enough to hire the entire Air Force pilot roster,
and this indicates a protracted battle for experienced
aviators is in the works.
The service is in the midst of what Maj. Gen. Michael
C. McMahan, Air Force director of personnel force management,
described last year as a "make-or-break" two-year
retention period. The numbers of separating Air Force
pilots barely scratch the surface of the private sector's
demand for experienced pilots, meaning jobs will continue
to be plentiful for aviators who want them.
According to Kit Darby, owner and president of Aviation
Information Resources, Inc., an aviation career placement
firm, commercial airlines hired about 5,000 former
military pilots in 1999, and major carrier demand for "quality
and experience" means that trained military pilots
will continue to be valued assets to airlines.
In an interview, Darby noted that military pilots
are in "fixed supply." Estimates are that
commercial carriers hired more than 19,000 pilots in
2000, most drawn from the ranks of 700,000 licensed
nonmilitary pilots in the United States. These carriers
have turned to other sources of pilots because not
nearly enough former military pilots are available,
he said, and the 19,000 new hires will be the fifth
consecutive record year for airline hiring.
Commercial carriers are actively gunning for military
pilots. In a July press release, Aviation Information
Resources announced the start up of an aviation job
fair. "The Airline Pilot Career Seminar and Airline
Forum is geared toward civilian and military pilots
who are seriously pursuing careers as airline pilots," read
the statement.
Staff Positions Questioned
Although nonflying staff positions reserved for pilots
account for a major portion of the pilot requirement,
eliminating nonflying pilot positions is not an option,
according to Rand. The study found that such a move
would prove difficult not only because many of the
positions belong to nonAir Force entities but
also because cutting the positions would reduce the
experience in important management posts.
"OSD has a staff-a big one," Hawley noted. "Congress
certainly isn't short on staff. Why do they think the
Air Force can operate without one?"
Further, pilot staff positions have been scrubbed
several times in recent years as the service has attempted
to find and reclassify positions that do not necessarily
require pilots.
"I would not argue that every billet we have
rated [for pilots] needs to be rated," Hawley
said, because "there is a tendency in any organization
to exaggerate requirements." However, he added,
pilots are not getting a great deal of career-broadening
management experience, and staff positions should not
be considered candidates for indiscriminate cuts.
Being a pilot undoubtedly pays a career benefit to
those who remain in the service. All but one of the
current Air Force four-star generals are pilots. The
exception is Gen. Lester L. Lyles, an engineer, who
is the head of Air Force Materiel Command.
Despite the complex case, the Air Force still has
critics. One of these is Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa),
who has argued that the Air Force must change the way
pilots are assigned and classified. Last fall, Harkin
urged Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen to direct
the service to clarify its needs by performing another
scrub of pilot requirements.
Harkin said DoD should review staff requirements to
determine if pilots are needed to fill these types
of nonflying positions currently designated for them
and more fully evaluate the merits of implementing
a fly-only career path for pilots wishing to stay in
the cockpit.
The need to fill staff positions with pilots has not
been explained well, concluded a 1999 General Accounting
Office report on the matter. The Congressional watchdog
agency found that DoD had not "comprehensively
assessed whether all of their required positions truly
need to be filled with active duty military pilots."
Confusion reigns even on the issue of how many pilots
are assigned to nonflying positions. According to Rand,
16 percent of the total Air Force pilot requirement
is nonflying; GAO reported that "the Air Force's
nonflying positions currently represent slightly more
than 20 percent of its total pilot requirements." Consequently,
the severity of the shortage was unclear to GAO because,
in its view, there may still be staff jobs reserved
for pilots that could be filled by other officers.
The Rand study notes skeptically, "Some argue
that nonflying billets do not represent valid requirements
[and] so simply removing these requirements will substantially
mitigate any apparent crisis." It countered that
insufficient experience "can degrade the readiness
and capability of operational units even if all the
cockpits remain filled." The Air Force has reduced
pilot requirements by 39 percent during the past decade,
while nonflying positions have been cut by 56 percent,
Rand notes, adding, "Any padding that may have
existed in staff requirements certainly has been substantially
reduced."
A Fly-Only Career?
What about moving toward a "fly-only" career
path?
Senior Pentagon officials have said this "could
be a consideration in the future." However, noted
Hawley, the current pilot shortage has already created
a de facto fly-only career path; most USAF pilots are
doing nothing but flying.
"We've done that, essentially," he added,
noting today a typical pilot probably spends about
17 years of his or her first 20 in the cockpit. This
is what leads to the unfilled staff billets. However,
formalizing such a fly-only program invites new problems
such as creating a class structure that could overtax
the non-fly-only pilots, who would become the only
options for headquarters desk jobs.
GAO found some pilots were concerned about this fact
as well. Though many welcomed the prospect of a fly-only
career, others are concerned about the career imbalance. "Many
pilots are now being asked to remain in cockpit positions,
which means they are not being given the opportunity
to serve in other types of career enhancing positions," said
the GAO report. "Some of these pilots have become
concerned that they will not be competitive for promotion."
Giving those staff positions to other career fields
would not be easy, either, Hawley said, because the
Air Force is dealing with many other shortages in the
officer ranks. "There's not a great surplus of
other types of officer expertise out there," he
said.
Inexperience Looms
In Rand's view, declining experience levels in flying
units confronts the Air Force with its most serious
immediate problem.
The report contends that a fly-only policy would further
exacerbate existing problems in management positions,
while not solving the inexperience issue either. "The
only real way to fix this is on the demand side," Hawley
explained, and the service has already increased pilot
production to what it considers the highest sustainable
level.
To resolve the experience level deficit and safely
increase pilot production, "the most obvious [solution]
is for units to fly more, but the additional flying
hours need to be programmed into the Air Force budget," Rand
states. "This difficult and time-consuming process
is complicated by the recent inability of fighter units
to generate enough training sorties to fly their currently
programmed hours."
Consequently, says Rand, the service is unlikely to
obtain approval for additional flying hours.
For years, the Air Force has been unable to accurately
predict the number of flying hours needed. It consistently
flies fewer hours than the number that is funded and
reprograms the excess funds to pay other expenses.
For example, in Fiscal 1999, hours flown were below
expectations at the beginning and end of the year but
surged to unpredicted highs during Operation Allied
Force. The net result was that the service got its
overall flying hour prediction nearly correct, but
training hours were slashed to accommodate the demand
for combat and support sorties, further slowing the
accumulation of flying experience for inexperienced
Stateside pilots.
Absent better flying hour predictions and funding
increases, solutions to the shortage will be hard to
carry out.
Restructuring Benefits
Air Combat Command is attempting to increase fighter
squadron sizes from 18 to 24 primary mission aircraft,
a move ACC hopes will free up pilot staff positions
through consolidation. While ACC has enlarged some
of its wings and squadrons, its ability to further
increase squadron sizes is hampered by a lack of base
closure authority, officials say.
Since 1995, 12 combat air force squadrons have been
enlarged from 18 primary aircraft to 24, and ACC is
actively looking for more ways to consolidate the fleet,
according to Lt. Col. Robert Burgess, chief of the
global attack branch of ACC's plans and programs directorate.
However, said Burgess, additional moves are "awful
hard to do" without closing bases or purchasing
additional aircraft.
More
radical changes could result in even greater reductions
in the pilot shortage, but these, too, require another
base closure round, Hawley said.
As ACC commander, Hawley briefed Air Force Secretary
F. Whitten Peters on a proposal that showed nine Numbered
Air Forces require 216 pilots in staff positions, while
a "potential restructure" that eliminated
five NAFs would only require 139 pilots in staff positions.
Similarly, 20 fighter wings with 364 pilots could
perhaps be reduced to 12 wings with 237 pilots, freeing
127 more pilots from staff positions, the proposal
explained. All of this is a "good idea whose time
has not yet come," Hawley said this summer.
Another recent Rand report shows that, for the time
being, eliminating a NAF within ACC could create unacceptable
problems. Currently, ACC can only count on about 80
percent of its Air Operations Center officials as experienced,
under ideal conditions, according to the report "The
Warfighting Capacity of [ACC's] Numbered Air Forces."
During wartime, the NAFs supply personnel to run the
AOC, coordinating the air campaign. There are shortages
of key personnel in each of the three NAFs within ACC,
meaning the units must pool resources to properly run
an AOC for any operation larger than a small-scale
combat operation, the study found.
It said, "Each NAF could itself barely provide
the trained personnel" to support an operation
requiring about 300 sorties per day from four independent
bases, a deployment level known as a quick-response
package. Further, the study found that, to support
larger operations, each NAF "would have had to
rely on people who may not have been adequately trained
or experienced, and/or borrow properly qualified people
from somewhere else."
The study was chartered by the Air Force to examine
the possibility of eliminating one of the NAFs, thereby
consolidating ACC operations into two NAFs.
A Total Force Solution
Total Force solutions to the shortage must be investigated,
Rand believes. Some new pilots could serve in Guard
or Reserve units, or experienced Guard or Reserve pilots
could be used as instructors in active duty units to
address the experience problem.
Rand found that these solutions offer great potential,
but steps must be taken to ensure Total Force solutions
do not harm pilots' careers-which would deter them
from agreeing to participate-and that they do not actually
inspire pilots to leave the active duty for Guard or
Reserve duty, as was the case in an earlier trial during
the 1980s.
In 1999, the Air Force leadership agreed to reduce
fighter pilot production slightly to 330 per year to
help remedy the experience problem. It simultaneously
decided that "30 new pilots [per year are] to
be absorbed by Guard and Reserve units," Rand
notes in the report.
Overall, Rand concludes, "We hope the Air Force
will pursue the Total Force initiatives despite the
implementation problems. These policies can be effective,
however, only if the [aircraft utilization] rate problem
is resolved in time to ensure that operational units
will be able to fly their programmed flying hours."
Adam J. Hebert is associate editor of Inside the Air
Force, a Washington, D.C.based defense newsletter.
His most recent article for Air Force Magazine-
"For
Bombers, Does START Equal Stop?"-appeared in
the October 2000 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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