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Delta Workers Face Uncertain Future
Avjobs.com is widely recognized as an Aviation Employment
Services leader.
Posted on Sun, Sep. 19,
2004
Delta Workers Face Uncertain Future
By Andrea Ahles, Star-Telegram Staff Writer
When Mike Pizzelanti lost his job as a pilot for Vanguard
Airlines in June 2002, he didn't know what to do.
"I was devastated," the Grapevine resident said. "I thought,
'What am I going to fall back on?' "
After five months without a job, Pizzelanti opened his own
business, a pet crematory in Euless called All Paws Go To
Heaven. He said it was a tough choice for someone who loves
flying but needed financial stability for his wife and 9-year-old
daughter.
That may soon become a common dilemma facing hundreds of
Delta Air Lines workers who will be laid off in coming weeks
as the airline eliminates its hub operations at Dallas/Fort
Worth Airport.
The Atlanta-based airline announced two weeks ago that it
would lay off 900 local workers and offer transfers to 2,700
others as it cuts its daily flights out of D/FW to 21 from
254. It is unlikely that many of the affected Delta employees
will find comparable work in the Metroplex's uncertain job
market, experts say.
"Aviation is a mobile industry," said Tim Lahey, customer
service manager at Avjobs.com, a Web site that lists jobs
in the aviation industry. "You may find a job in your local
area, but generally speaking, most people will have to move
for work."
The site has more than 4,000 jobs posted in its system,
but most are on the East or West coasts, Lahey said. Only
150 job postings are for positions in Texas, he said.
The state's air transportation industry has steadily shed
jobs since 9-11. Texas lost 12,700 jobs in the air transportation
sector as of the end of last year. About 7,900 of those
jobs were in the Fort Worth-Arlington area.
Limous Walker, a rapid response manager at Tarrant County's
Workforce Solutions, said his agency will hold informational
sessions this week to outline options for affected Delta
employees. Workforce Solutions will also hold a job fair
for displaced workers, set for January.
"The job skills, in many cases, can be used in another industry,"
Walker said. "For example, customer service for airlines
can be customer service at another company."
Many airline workers used that idea to hedge their bets
after job cuts at American Airlines accelerated last year.
Euless resident Gina Stevens-Growden decided to go back
to school when she was furloughed Sept. 1 from her flight
attendant job at Champion Air, a Minneapolis-based charter
airline. Stevens-Growden, who also flew previously for Southwest
Airlines and ASA, had been attending classes part time at
the University of Texas at Arlington toward a bachelor's
degree in psychology. She began taking classes full time
after she lost her job.
Eventually, she said, she wants to go into private counseling
so she and her husband, who works as a gate agent for Delta,
do not have to rely on the uncertain airline industry.
"The airline industry is constantly in flux. I would like
to have a little more stability in a profession," Stevens-Growden
said. "Plus, we don't want to put all of our eggs in one
basket."
Her husband has more than 20 years with Delta, so the couple
are not overly concerned that he will lose his job when
the airline reduces its D/FW schedule. But Stevens-Growden
hopes her move into a new profession will make it easier
for their family to deal with the ups and downs of the airline
industry.
Some experts say Delta's flight cutbacks at D/FW will prompt
other airlines to enter the local market, providing new
opportunities for laid-off airline workers in North Texas.
"As other airlines increase their flights from D/FW and
hire more people, I think that will mitigate some of the
losses," said Rakesh Shankar, an economist at Economy.com.
American Airlines said last month that it is adding 70 daily
flights to its D/FW operations. But it is unlikely that
the Fort Worth carrier will hire any new workers because
it has thousands of furloughed workers waiting to return
to flight duty.
No other airlines have announced expansion plans at local
airports. Southwest spokeswoman Melanie Jones said the Dallas-based
carrier is "not in a hiring mode" and is filling most vacant
positions from within the company.
Pizzelanti, who spent 16 years as a pilot, does not have
any plans to return to the aviation industry because his
pet cremation business has taken off.
"I do miss flying, of course, because you're always a pilot
in your heart," Pizzelanti said. "But I have to look at
being able to support my family, and I find my new business
very rewarding."
IN THE KNOW
Local aviation workers
The number of local workers in the air transportation sector
has declined since 2000.
| |
Dec. |
Dec. |
Dec. |
Dec. |
July |
| |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
|
Texas |
78,300 |
70,900 |
69,600 |
65,600 |
66,300 |
|
Fort Worth |
38,100 |
33,900 |
32,700 |
30,200 |
30,400 |
Arlington MSA
SOURCE: Texas Workforce Commission
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