Release #07.004
January 30, 2007
ALPA Responds to Age 60 NPRM Announcement
Blue Ribbon Panel will study issue of pilot retirement
The president of the Air Line Pilots Association, International (ALPA) is
forming an internal work group to develop a response to the FAA administrator’s
announcement to conduct rulemaking on the mandatory airline pilot retirement
age.
“The fact that the FAA is set to put the Age 60 regulation into the rulemaking
process is very significant,” explained ALPA president, Capt. John Prater, after
Administrator Marion Blakey’s announcement at a National Press Club luncheon
today. “The FAA is careful to propose rulemaking only when it is convinced that
a rule will need to change.”
“ALPA policy is to support the rule as it is,” Prater said, adding that since
1980 the union has opposed and continues to oppose legislation that would
overturn the rule. “However, despite that policy, we cannot afford to ignore the
significance of the FAA’s announcement. That is why I have decided to form an
ALPA Blue Ribbon Panel on Pilot Retirement, composed of representatives from the
four of the association’s standing committees most logically connected with the
Age 60 Issue: Air Safety, Retirement and Insurance, Collective Bargaining, and
Aeromedical.”
The mission of the panel will be to study the effects of potential changes to
the FAA Age 60 Rule and to develop recommendations on how ALPA can address the
issue of pilot retirement with the goal of having a positive effect for ALPA
members. The committee will uphold ALPA’s 75 year-long commitment to ensuring
the highest level of aviation safety. The FAA announcement and the formation of
the ALPA Blue Ribbon Panel come in the wake of five years of tumult for the
airline pilot profession. Furloughs, pay and benefit cuts, and a lack of job
growth have put severe economic pressure on airline pilots of all ages and
experience levels. The panel will present its recommendations to the ALPA
Executive Board, composed of the leaders of ALPA’s 40 pilot groups, at its May
2007 meeting.
“While it is impossible to predict what the final FAA rule will look like,”
Prater said, “ALPA will use its credibility and influence to protect pilot
interests throughout the process.”
The Air Line Pilots Association, International, is the largest airline pilot
union in the world and represents 60,000 pilots who fly for 40 U.S. and Canadian
airlines. Visit ALPA on the web at www.alpa.org.
Please click here to read the FAA's news release and FAA Administrator Blakey's speech, "Experience Counts."
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ALPA CONTACT: Pete Janhunen, Linda Shotwell: (703) 481-4440.