When the pandemic began, online shopping and delivery became even more prevalent than they already were. Amazon had already made order and delivery a well-known, often-used, mainstream process. When the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered nonesssential stores across the nation, delivery became one of the only means of obtaining items without venturing out into an uncertain world of packed grocery and department stores with half-empty shelves. It is often forgotten, though, how these shelves get stocked in the first place and how packages get from manufacturers and distribution centers to their destination. We often heard about truck drivers in the early days of the pandemic, but long-distance deliveries are often transported by another group of unsung heroes: cargo pilots.
Not only were cargo pilots some of the many essential personnel who had to continue working through the pandemic, the differences in their work environment were some of the most noticeable. The skies were devoid of passenger aircraft and the normal commercial traffic. If the near empty skies and airport terminals were not enough, the decline in passenger flights shifted the burden of the cargo those aircraft would normally
transport onto cargo planes, increasing their necessity at a time when they were already essential. We’ve all seen the unsettling pictures of the passenger aircraft sitting idle on taxiways due to a lack of demand and the widespread flight cancellations that were a consequence. Those led to layoffs in the commercial industry as well, meaning cargo pilots were burdened with even more work. Lastly, pilots described these sights as “surreal” and unnerving, the likes fo which they had never seen before.
The other encounters (or lack thereof) in their line of work were also surreal. The changes to their work environment and some of the guidelines and regulations surrounding them have been severe. For example, international regulations leave some pilots isolated in hotels for as much as 14 days, some unable to even leave their rooms for so much as fresh air. In other words, these people are away for their families for sometimes more than two weeks at a time and are unable to take part in any physical activities or see other human beings. They are relegated to figuring out what to do with themselves in their hotel rooms and engaging in human contact through virtual means only. All of this takes a psychological toll.
However, these pilots are most definetely essential. This is evidenced by the contents of their cargo. Cargo pilots were tasked with transporting much needed PPE and other medical supplies at the height of the pandemic when hospitals and other healthcare providers needed it most. They are still doing that to this day. Another thing cargo pilots are transporting today is vaccines. The key to the end of the pandemic is literally in the hands of cargo pilots, even though they put themselves at risk to do it due to lax rules in specific parts of the domestic industry.