
Pilot shortage can’t be addressed by existing programs, documents suggest
OTTAWA — Federal officials combing through skills training programs have concluded major changes are needed if those are to be used to address a shortage of airline pilots.
Instead, officials are suggesting a strategy being used by other countries as a way for Canada to address a growing need for pilots: governments and airlines partner to pay for pilot training.
The funds — either dedicated financing or government-industry training programs — in turn could ensure “that a sufficient supply of trained pilots can sustain the current and projected demand,” reads the briefing note The Canadian Press obtained through the Access to Information Act.
The cost of training can be fully or partially covered, and pilots typically owe airlines a certain number of years of service in return.