『Aircraft Mechanics Are in Massive Demand—Why Aren't More People Entering the Industry? | Brett Oestreich, AMFA』のカバーアート

Aircraft Mechanics Are in Massive Demand—Why Aren't More People Entering the Industry? | Brett Oestreich, AMFA

Aircraft Mechanics Are in Massive Demand—Why Aren't More People Entering the Industry? | Brett Oestreich, AMFA

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Aircraft maintenance technician Bret Oestreich on signing off 250 lives every night shift — and why aviation's most essential trade stays hidden.Every time you board a plane, someone signed their name to a document saying that aircraft is airworthy. That person is an Aircraft Maintenance Technician — and most passengers never see them, never think about them, and never know they exist. Bret Oestreich, National President of AMFA (Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association), has spent decades inside this world. He started on C-130s in the Air Force, earned his A&P license and pilot's license simultaneously, and worked his way from general aviation to American Airlines to Southwest Airlines before leading one of the most important independent unions in aviation.AMFA represents over 7,500 AMTs across the United States and Canada — and Bret is sounding the alarm: the pipeline of new technicians is not keeping up with retirements, only 8% of military veterans with relevant experience are transitioning into civilian aviation maintenance, and women represent just 2.8% of the AMT workforce. Meanwhile, the job demands more than most people realize — technical knowledge, soft skills, and the integrity to do the right thing at 3am when nobody's watching.If you're a young person who's never heard of this career, a veteran unsure how to translate your skills, or anyone who wants to understand what it actually takes to keep planes flying — this episode is for you.IN THIS EPISODE(00:00) – The Invisible Workforce: Why aircraft maintenance technicians are the most essential people on the tarmac that nobody ever sees — and why that invisibility is the industry's biggest recruitment problem.(01:00) – Soft Skills vs. Tech Skills: What Bret says new AMTs are most unprepared for, why Gen Z's lack of hands-on mechanical experience is a real challenge, and why humility matters more than technical knowledge on day one.(04:35) – The Visibility Problem: How AMFA is trying to reach younger generations through grade school events, aviation days, and votech programs — and why you can't wait until high school to plant the seed.(09:15) – Bret's Career Story: From working on rusted leaf springs in Minnesota to C-130s in the Air Force, then general aviation, American Airlines, and Southwest — how Bret built a career no one told him was possible.(12:41) – The Military-to-AMT Pipeline: Why only 8% of vets with aviation maintenance experience transition into civilian AMT roles, what the SkillBridge program is doing to help, and why earning the A&P license requires planning two years before separation — not six months.(30:08) – Knowledge, Skill, Integrity: What it's actually like to sign off on a commercial aircraft at 3am under pressure from the airline, and why AMFA's three-word code is the only thing standing between corner-cutting and catastrophe.Key TakeawaysAircraft maintenance technicians are invisible by design — passengers see pilots and flight attendants, but AMTs work overnight while planes are grounded, which is exactly why awareness campaigns have to start in grade school, not high school.Only 8% of military veterans with aviation maintenance experience transition into civilian AMT careers — largely because no one tells them how, and the A&P licensing process requires proactive planning at least two years before leaving the military.When AMTs are surveyed about what they want from employers, pay ranks first — but quality of life, scheduling flexibility, and culture follow close behind, and many workers say they'll accept less pay for more respect and control over their schedule.AMFA's guiding principle — knowledge, skill, integrity — means doing the job right even when the airline is pushing for a faster turnaround and no one is watching, because the person who signs off on that aircraft is personally accountable for every passenger on board.About the GuestBret Oestreich is the National President of AMFA, the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association — the only independent craft union in North America exclusively representing aircraft maintenance technicians. AMFA represents approximately 5,500 AMTs at U.S. carriers including Southwest Airlines, Alaska Airlines, Horizon Airlines, Spirit, and Sun Country, and recently expanded into Canada with over 2,000 members at carriers including WestJet and Jazz.Bret's career as an AMT began in the U.S. Air Force, where he worked on C-130 cargo and special operations aircraft as both a crew chief and technician. He later earned his Airframe and Powerplant (A&P) license and private pilot certificate simultaneously before moving into general aviation and commercial aviation at American Airlines and Southwest Airlines. Under his leadership, AMFA has grown from 4,000 to 7,500+ members and made history as the only trade union certified for aircraft maintenance engineers in Canada.Keywordsaircraft maintenance technician, AMT career, aviation maintenance, ...
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