SEO Title
AARP Opposes Age 65 Retirement for Charter/Frax Pilots
Subtitle
Pilots should be judged on the basis of their individual ability, flying skills, and their health," it said.
Subject Area
Teaser Text
Pilots should be judged on the basis of their individual ability, flying skills, and their health," it said.
Content Body

Highly influential U.S. association AARP is opposing a manager’s amendment in the FAA reauthorization bill that would impose a mandatory retirement age of 65 for certain Part 135 charter and Part 91K fractional pilots. “AARP has long opposed mandatory retirement; using an arbitrary age as a proxy for competence is wrong in any occupation, and it is wrong for pilots,” AARP to House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee chairman Bill Shuster and ranking member Pete DeFazio.

“Pilots should be judged on the basis of their individual ability, flying skills, and their health, not on stereotypes or mistaken assumptions about their fitness based on age,” the association, which has 38 million members, told the congressmen. “The pilots affected are already subject to twice-yearly medical certifications and ‘check ride’ tests of fitness and competency to fly. AARP supports requirements for testing and exams that are designed to measure the job-related characteristics needed to do the job. If different or additional types of tests are needed, the focus should be on determining that.”

AARP argues that the proposal is not about safety. “Otherwise, it would not have a coverage threshold of 100,000 flights per year, which apparently applies only to one company,” it notes. That company is NetJets.

“The shortage of pilots facing carriers—a circumstance due in no small part due to the impending mandatory retirements of boomer-generation pilots—has some experts proposing that the mandatory retirement age for [airline] pilots be increased,” AARP said in the letter. “A proposal to impose a compulsory retirement age on pilots who currently are not subject to one is a proposal headed in exactly the wrong direction.”

Expert Opinion
False
Ads Enabled
True
Used in Print
False
Writer(s) - Credited
Chad Trautvetter
Newsletter Headline
From the Archives: AARP Opposes Age 65 for Part 135/91K
Newsletter Body

Highly influential U.S. association AARP opposed a manager’s amendment in a 2018 FAA reauthorization bill to impose a mandatory retirement age of 65 for certain Part 135 charter and Part 91K fractional pilots. “AARP has long opposed mandatory retirement; using an arbitrary age as a proxy for competence is wrong in any occupation, and it is wrong for pilots,” AARP told then House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Bill Shuster and ranking member Pete DeFazio.

“Pilots should be judged on the basis of their individual ability, flying skills, and their health, not on stereotypes or mistaken assumptions about their fitness based on age,” the association, which has 38 million members, told the congressmen. “The pilots affected are already subject to twice-yearly medical certifications and ‘check ride’ tests of fitness and competency to fly. AARP supports requirements for testing and exams that are designed to measure the job-related characteristics needed to do the job. If different or additional types of tests are needed, the focus should be on determining that.”

Solutions in Business Aviation
0
Publication Date (intermediate)
AIN Publication Date
----------------------------