From Deseret News archives:

Some retired Delta pilots are finding work in Asia

They seek options after the airline canceled pensions

Published: Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006 5:24 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
WALESKA, Ga. — Denis and Rosalyn Waldron planned to spend more time at their waterfront house on Lake Arrowhead when he took early retirement from Delta Air Lines after 27 years as a pilot.

But the couple spends many more days in Seoul, where Denis, 58, works as a Boeing 777 captain for Asiana, a South Korean passenger carrier.

The Waldrons didn't expect to be exiled from their home or country at this stage in their lives — but Denis said he had to take drastic action before reaching mandatory pilot retirement at age 60.

"I always considered myself extremely fortunate at Delta because I was never furloughed and never put on the 'B' scale," said Waldron, a former U.S. Navy pilot who joined the Atlanta-based airline in 1977. "I wanted to stay at Delta, and I agonized over my decision to leave. But guys like me were getting pushed out the door."

Waldron and hundreds of fellow senior Delta pilots have retired early in the past four years to protect lump sum pension payouts that often topped $1 million each and were jeopardized by the company's Chapter 11 bankruptcy court filing. With the lump sum and anticipated $7,000-a-month pension, the Waldrons could have afforded a comfortable retirement at the lakefront house they moved into two years ago.

Story continues below
But when Delta, which operates a hub at Salt Lake City International Airport, canceled payments to Waldron and thousands of other retirees this year, Denis decided to go back to work and make up some of the estimated $2 million hit. He signed on with Asiana, a young carrier that was looking for senior pilots with international flight experience.

About a dozen Delta pilots who took early retirement are now working for foreign carriers in Southeast Asia, China, India and the Middle East. Unlike U.S. carriers that require newly hired pilots to start at the bottom of seniority lists, some overseas carriers allow them to join according to their qualifications and experience levels.

U.S. pilots working as captains at foreign carriers typically earn about $80,000 to $100,000 a year, far less than the $180,000 a year they would earn at the top of U.S. pay scales. But most of the money U.S. pilots make overseas is tax-free as long as expatriate pilots stay largely outside the country.

More U.S. pilots could follow them if current industry trends hold.

Aerospace giant Boeing estimates the global airline fleet will more than double to 35,000 by 2024, with the fastest growth in Asia and the Middle East. The boom will require an additional 18,000 trained pilots annually, and countries such as China and India won't be able to train them fast enough.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

How true!! There is a gap and there is also a challenge to live like we should.

Interesting. A bill where Utahns agree with the major elements, but not the...

push poll. The questions are designed to elict a certain response. Sort of...

Beware delusions on climate

The air over any city in the world is filthy and killing us. The oceans are...

Re-creating Bethlehem

(Alma 7:10)says Jesus was born in Jerusalem?

It was a great event I'm glad to have been there. He has always been a great...

Utahns want health care reform bills

"just keep on talking" = "we can't afford to do nothing" Duh

USU home-court streak ends

Well there is one team that won't be coming back to the Spectrum!

Here is the progress of society to date: anyone can write a letter or post on...

Utahns want health care reform bills

A little off-topic, but your analogy is pretty close to the way our food IS...

Advertisements