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ProfessionalLeftist

(4,982 posts)
Fri Mar 8, 2013, 09:54 PM Mar 2013

10 shocking secrets of flight attendants

A seasoned flight attendant for a major carrier dishes 10 workplace secrets

1. If the plane door is open, we're not getting paid
You know all that preflight time where we're cramming bags into overhead bins? None of that shows up in our paychecks. Flight attendants get paid for "flight hours only." Translation: The clock doesn't start until the craft pushes away from the gate. Flight delays, cancellations, and layovers affect us just as much as they do passengers — maybe even more. Airlines aren't completely heartless, though. From the time we sign in at the airport until the plane slides back into the gate at our home base, we get an expense allowance of $1.50 an hour. It's not much, but it helps pay the rent.

2. Landing this gig is tough
Competition is fierce: When Delta announced 1,000 openings in 2010, it received over 100,000 applications. Even Harvard's acceptance rate isn't that low! All that competition means that most applicants who score interviews have college degrees — I know doctors and lawyers who've made the career switch. But you don't need a law degree to get your foot in the jetway door. Being able to speak a second language greatly improves your chances. So does having customer service experience (especially in fine dining) or having worked for another airline, a sign that you can handle the lifestyle. The 4 percent who do get a callback interview really need to weigh the pros and cons of the job. As we like to say, flight attendants must be willing to cut their hair and go anywhere. And if you can't survive on $18,000 a year, most new hires' salary, don't even think about applying.

3. We can be too tall or too short to fly
During Pan Am's heyday in the 1960s, there were strict requirements for stewardesses: They had to be at least 5-foot-2, weigh no more than 130 pounds, and retire by age 32. They couldn't be married or have children, either. As a result, most women averaged just 18 months on the job. In the 1970s, the organization Stewardesses for Women's Rights forced airlines to change their ways. The mandatory retirement age was the first thing to go. By the 1980s, the marriage restriction was gone as well.

These days, as long as flight attendants can do the job and pass a yearly training program, we can keep flying. As for weight restrictions, most of those disappeared in the 1990s. Today, the rules are about safety: Flight attendants who can't sit in the jump seat without an extended seat belt or can't fit through the emergency exit window cannot fly. The same goes for height requirements: We have to be tall enough to grab equipment from the overhead bins, but not so tall that we're hitting our heads on the ceiling. Today, that typically means between 5-foot-3 and 6-foot-1, depending on the aircraft.


THE REST...

http://theweek.com/article/index/241024/10-shocking-secrets-of-flight-attendants#
8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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10 shocking secrets of flight attendants (Original Post) ProfessionalLeftist Mar 2013 OP
What's their salary? Brayshawna Williams Mar 2013 #1
Article says starting is $18K ProfessionalLeftist Mar 2013 #5
Nothing about crop dusting then? Ron Obvious Mar 2013 #2
Restaurants and Caterers jeffrey_pdx Mar 2013 #7
A friend of mine (back in the 90's) Helen Reddy Mar 2013 #3
The most shocking thing of all is how hard they work, Aristus Mar 2013 #4
You'd think the pilots themselves get paid handsomely ProfessionalLeftist Mar 2013 #6
Whatever happened to the FA that quit and then slid down the emergency shoot, yortsed snacilbuper Mar 2013 #8
 

Ron Obvious

(6,261 posts)
2. Nothing about crop dusting then?
Fri Mar 8, 2013, 11:10 PM
Mar 2013

I was expecting to read about the secret practice flight attendants refer to as 'crop dusting'.

jeffrey_pdx

(222 posts)
7. Restaurants and Caterers
Sat Mar 9, 2013, 03:10 PM
Mar 2013

I worked with one guy who was really good at it. Usually not a good trait, but every once in a while...

 

Helen Reddy

(998 posts)
3. A friend of mine (back in the 90's)
Sat Mar 9, 2013, 12:30 AM
Mar 2013

was a flight attendant for AA. He gave me a t-shirt:

WE ARE HERE TO SAVE YOUR ASS
NOT KISS IT.

I wear it to this day.

ProfessionalLeftist

(4,982 posts)
6. You'd think the pilots themselves get paid handsomely
Sat Mar 9, 2013, 08:06 AM
Mar 2013

But they don't. In fact, you'd be shocked, IMO at pilot salaries.

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