The last time I flew, I felt like cattle.
The last time I flew, I felt like cattle.
Yeah, for us, having some uneducated piece of shit say she needed my 7 month pregnant wife to bare her stomach in a crowded airport to prove she was pregnant almost got me arrested.
Once we're on the planes, usually things go smoothly... the problem is, it's a three hour ordeal to get on the damn plane!
The flying public, how special. This is long and if you want to continue through life without a clue as to what is involved in getting your spoiled ass to where ever you're going in 4 hours or less, don't read it.
Having four brothers that work for a major airline and recently having gone to work for the same one I have a little insight. The American public is to blame for the airlines that we have. You, the flying public want to ride hassle free on perfectly maintained new aircraft with gourmet chefs, the best trained flight crews, easy chair comfort, movies, flight attendants that look like models with wonderful motherly attitudes, free drinks, perfect weather, no turbulence, luggage at the carousel immediately, be allowed to bore everyone around you with nonstop cell phone calls, carry on as much luggage as you want, as heavy as you want, with as little security as you want but still have a perfectly safe flight, be on time or even early or else give you free hotel and round trip tickets for your whole family..... and you want all of this for the price of taking a Greyhound bus. Guess what, not possible.
Airplanes are incredibly complex machines with hundreds of thousands of parts, if a fuse goes out a certified mechanic has to come out and fix it or the aircraft cannot leave, FAA regulations.....if that mechanic forgets to sign the log book that aircraft has to wait for him/her to return to sign it. These aircraft as well as an airline in general are also incredibly expensive to operate. The crew cost, the fuel cost, maintenance, tires, new seat covers, blankets, pillows, food for everyone on board even though you are in a metal tube 35,000 feet in the air, thousands of ramp personnel, ramp equipment, gate leases, training including aircraft simulators that are millions apiece, thousands of support employees including lawyers, accountants, marketing, airport landing fees, leasing of office space.....nobody I know has a clue how they could possibly make money and yet the public demands even cheaper flights.
If there is bad weather in Houston, thousands of flights a day will be effected across the United States. A late flight means late bags to connecting flights. Any bag that doesn't get on the aircraft that the passenger gets on has to go on the next available flight. It then has to be delivered to where ever that passenger is located, the airlines figure at least 100 dollars a bag and a pissed customer..... if a flight was late and those 8 passengers rushed to get on the connecting flight and yet TSA has held their bags for inspection, we aren't going to leave the gate late waiting for those bags, we are pushing out and hopefully while the aircraft is on the ramp starting it's engines a bag runner will get across the airport to us so we can open baggage and slide them in or else the airline might be out 1600 dollars. This happens hundreds of times a day.
I cannot possibly describe how incredibly complex the whole thing is, I am right in the middle of it and have no idea how anyone gets their bag. If you would see just a typical baggage room, the conveyor belts that go in every direction for blocks, get loaded on to carts, delivered to the gate and uploaded on the plane all because the ticket agent put the right code on the tag....it is amazing. While the aircraft is on the ground, depending on the size of the aircraft, you will have the person that directs the aircraft into the gate area(position 1 point man), the wing walkers(Positions 2 and 3) on each wing making sure a half million dollars of damage isn't done to a wing by hitting something in the way and possibly other helpers to run bags to the bag room and other bag runners for connecting flights, food catering, fueler and lavatory guy. The wing walkers chock the wheels and connect ground power and ac, open the forward and rear baggage doors and drive the belt loaders to the plane, they then enter the bins and download 150- 300 bags of all different sizes and weights, mail, cargo, dogs, cats and even tigers, dead bodies and assorted aircraft parts. While this is going on the point man is getting the load plan to see where everthing leaving will go.....basically a reverse of the download. Each bag is scanned as it is loaded, counted and stacked in the bin so it doesn't shift in mid flight. While this is happening the fueler is putting on thousands of gallons of jet fuel, the caterer is loading both galleys with food and drinks, the lavatory guy is emptying and refilling the blue water and sink water in all of the toilets. While all of this is happening the FAA might send over an inspector to mess with you or customs will show up to check some cargo. There is also the cleaning crew that is running through the plane replacing blankets and pillows with clean ones, vaccuming and cleaning the heads. All of this happens in an hour or less typically except for the really large wide body aircraft.
I have told you all this to make you aware of what actually goes on before the plane even leaves the gate a lot of which is done before you board....it is a tremendous amount of effort for every flight. No airline wants to waste that effort on never getting off the ground. They also don't want their customers sitting on an aircraft not going anywhere for 11 hours, that cost them a tremendous amount of money and it trickles to other flights to where it is more costly than you can imagine.
I am no fan of Jet Blue, they undercut real airlines by making deals with foreign aircraft makers(Airbus) that give them aircraft interest free to try to hurt American carriers. But I will not be silly enough to blame them for this. Look at regulations written by your favorite politicians, blame lawyers that help the politicians draft laws to cover them, look at the people that run the airport and the security.......non of these are going to lose money from this, the airline will and that is why I suspect it is less likely the airline that is to blame. What do they have to gain by keeping a crew and a flight full of passengers trapped in one of their planes? If 12 planes were stuck out on the ramp in the snow, how do you go about getting all of those passengers off without bringing them back to the gate and how do you bring them back to the gate if all of the gates are full? That is at least 1200-2000 people. If you get buses to them and you could get them off the plane how many bus trips would that take because I guarantee you this much, they wouldn't get cooperation from the understanding public. Everyone would demand their bags and everything else they brought on the plane.
The moral.....Check the weather before going to the airport, don't expect miracles, bring some real food to eat(you know airplane food sucks and yet you never bring your own), understand that there are many people that all want to be pampered and spoiled for the price of a bus ride and there is only so much that can be done and try to think of what you would do if you were in the other guy's shoes. One other thing, if you care about something never put it in baggage, that is all I will say about that but beleive me...I know.
Last edited by Sitarro; 02-16-2007 at 07:21 AM.
No airline wants to waste that effort on never getting off the ground. They also don't want their customers sitting on an aircraft not going anywhere for 11 hours, that cost them a tremendous amount of money and it trickles to other flights to where it is more costly than you can imagine.
What do they have to gain by keeping a crew and a flight full of passengers trapped in one of their planes? If 12 planes were stuck out on the ramp in the snow, how do you go about getting all of those passengers off without bringing them back to the gate and how do you bring them back to the gate if all of the gates are full? That is at least 1200-2000 people. If you get buses to them and you could get them off the plane how many bus trips would that take because I guarantee you this much, they wouldn't get cooperation from the understanding public. Everyone would demand their bags and everything else they brought on the plane. [/QUOTE]
I dunno about you or anyone else... but I for one would be getting OFF that damn plane.... freakin' 11 hours at the gate.... in a pigs eye...
I once was on a flight that landed in National Airport less than 10 minutes before a severe thunderstorm hit. The passengers had to wait in the plane till the storm went away - about 45 looong minutes - before we could get off.
That was for the safety of the ground crew, and I understand that, but boy, was I uncomfortable!
I dunno about you or anyone else... but I for one would be getting OFF that damn plane.... freakin' 11 hours at the gate.... in a pigs eye...[/QUOTE]
I believe they were sitting near the runway not the gate and if you could get the door open and jumped from the height of a 737s door onto ice you would break something, either both ankles or legs. The Airbus is even higher. Think about it logically rather than emotionally, if it was remotely possible to get those people off of that plane without risking injury to the passengers, the aircraft or the crew.... wouldn't a company that depends on public perception have done whatever it takes to do just that?
My guess is that as is typical, the report is sorely lacking in any detail and is making the situation much more simplistic than it was, what is the rest of the story?
That's right, if there is lightning around the airport the operations are halted for numerous reasons, your safety and mine are a couple of them. Just like the way the public wants to second guess politicians or sports figures from a place of complete ignorance so to do they want to second guess the oil industry and the airlines.
It could have been much worse Birdzeye, you could have been flying in that storm.
Last edited by Sitarro; 02-16-2007 at 01:31 PM.
Actually, what I was told was that they'd have lost their place in line to take off if they got off the runway and they were hoping to get off the ground. They knew if the plane couldn't leave, the passengers wouldn't get another flight out either.
I don't know what other way there was to handle it.
That's why I didn't complain. I also didn't complain about waiting for something like two hours for my luggage. The weather made things really chaotic that evening and lots of flights were being cancelled. At least I got in.
I called my husband and let him know I was OK and not to expect me home till around midnight.