...

Up in the panhandle there may be a DPE or two with some availability. In the SAT area I know one DPE that stopped his waitlist when it was 50 people deep. Once he cleared that backlog over about four months, he will only schedule someone if they can take the checkride within two weeks.
 
TCABM ‘s post sounds like at least some DPEs are trying to fix it.
I have no doubt there are folks trying to, but from the numbers of frustrated folks complaining, it appears to be an ongoing struggle. On the other hand, I don’t feel tremendous sympathy for folks griping about the cost. If I jumped through the hoops to be a DPE it would cost me several thousand dollars for every day sacrificed from my primary job to give checkrides. Obviously, it’s not realistic to make that back as a DPE, so I agree no one is likely getting rich off of it. It sounds like an interesting retirement gig, maybe. The FAA and Congress have successfully screwed up a system that used to work fairly well.
 
Well, from a very basic point of view, each of us only has so many days left. Every single delay we incur is time that we can never get back, so schedule management is incredibly valuable….
DPEs are a finite resource, of which the FAA makes a publicly available list of them. Nothing prevents you from reaching out directly to anyone on that list. Maybe look for a guy in Bulverde.
 
We are out of everything.
AMEs
DPEs
DMEs
FAA medical officers
Qualified ASIs at the FSDO.
A&P-IAs
A&Ps
I've never seen it this bad and I've been aviation not quite 50 years.
 
We are out of everything.
AMEs
DPEs
DMEs
FAA medical officers
Qualified ASIs at the FSDO.
A&P-IAs
A&Ps
I've never seen it this bad and I've been aviation not quite 50 years.
Don’t forget about qualified pilots. ;)
 
...he said ironically, as he never runs out of patients. :smilewinkgrin:

Nothing ironic about it, especially considering he has clients, not patients. The fewer AMEs, the more each AME has to handle. Nothing prevents anyone from submitting on MedXpress.

But we both know Bruce limit’s his practice to the hardest of the hard; the quantity of those cases is increasing for various reasons while the number of AMEs the FAA will designate as Senior AMEs is shrinking because there’s not enough staff to oversee the Senior AMEs nor to process the cases needing review.

The canary in the coal mine has stopped making noise; difficult case revenue airmen will get weeded out simply because there’s not enough qualified AMEs to process and oversee their applications.

End result is effectively shutting those with problems out of the system by not initially certifying them at the class 3 level, the. Ny not doing timely initial certs at the Class 2 and 1 levels, leaving just those already in the system as the relevant population. That’ll be critical mass and those who can hide their problem will because WOM will be don’t disclose anything that *might* be disqualifying.

And that, is how overall safety ends up being compromised at a systemic level.

Personally, I’m glad Bruce has enough work that he has to simply consult the ‘hard’ initial cases and not sponsor them as well. That means revenue aviators are at least using the system as designed.
 
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We are out of everything.
AMEs
DPEs
DMEs
FAA medical officers
Qualified ASIs at the FSDO.
A&P-IAs
A&Ps
I've never seen it this bad and I've been aviation not quite 50 years.

Worry not. Soon we’ll also be out of 100ll and parts for our old airplanes, so the other shortages will become moot.
 
We are out of everything.
AMEs
DPEs
DMEs
FAA medical officers
Qualified ASIs at the FSDO.
A&P-IAs
A&Ps
I've never seen it this bad and I've been aviation not quite 50 years.

I’m out of excuses why I can’t go to OSH. I ain’t no theisen when it comes to excuses…… :)
 
I sincerely empathize. My colleagues and myself truly do our best to service the need. I would recommend looking outside your district for resources... sometimes there's availability right around the corner.
 
When I was ready for the CFI checkride in 2018, there were two DPEs in the San Jose FSDO region doing CFI rides. One was backed up for a couple months, and the other was known as a bully and had an inordinately high fail rate but was available quickly. (Note: He’s no longer a DPE. Supposedly he received a notification during a checkride that his status was revoked - finally. He was universally hated.)

So I scheduled with the available DPE, then had to reschedule. In the meantime, my CFI found out that a DPE in Fresno (different district) had gotten authorization for doing CFI checkrides, so we scheduled with him. The original DPE emailed me asking when I wanted to schedule with him. I made the mistake of telling him I was going to Fresno; should’ve just gone radio silent. This was just before out-of-district was good to go across the board.

So he emails my CFI and me, and in a rather angry tone tells us it’s a violation of policy and the FAA will absolutely not allow checkrides out of district, blahblahblah.

My CFI sent an email to the FSDO lead (or whatever his title is) ASI, and CCed the DPE who was against it, asking if it was allowable for me to go to Fresno. The ASI’s almost immediate response? “Fine with me”. No punctuation, no greeting.
 
If you are looking for IR checkrides with 2-4 week lead times......you are going to have to go North.
 
We are out of everything.
AMEs
DPEs
DMEs
FAA medical officers
Qualified ASIs at the FSDO.
A&P-IAs
A&Ps
I've never seen it this bad and I've been aviation not quite 50 years.
Well that’s sobering to hear.
 
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