PhilosopherPilot
Well-Known Member
I think most anyone can understand an accident. What gets me boiling are the ones who are intentionally difficult, and strive to leave you behind.
That's why I like the Delta system. No paperwork to fill out and once you are listed as active, it shows a jumpseater on the AWABS. Now, it takes a pilot to do his job and actually see it listed, but that prompts the question, "Where's the jumpseater?"Pretty much the exact same thing happened to me on United at IAD going to Seattle once. Oversold flight and I had filled out the jumpseat paperwork (and was the only jumpseater). The agent was all set to print out my boarding pass when a woman came up the jetway in tears because somebody was in her seat and she thought she wasn't going to get on the flight. The agent told me she'd be right back and went down the jetway. You couldn't actually see the plane from the podium so I just stood there waiting for 10 minutes and when she finally came back she looked at me and asked if she could help me. I showed her the jumpseat form and she goes "oops! there goes the plane now." 3 hours later I got on an American flight to Dallas and then an Alaska flight to Seattle.
Can all the Union J/s committees work out system where everyone uses a website or myid travel to put in our info so all we need to do is have the gate agent print a pass? Why is that so hard these days?
I like the ability to last minute walk up. You go this route and we end up like AA: "no online listing, no jumpseat".
I think in general the best way to do something is the exact opposite of the procedure AA developed.I like the ability to last minute walk up. You go this route and we end up like AA: "no online listing, no jumpseat".
That's why I like the Delta system. No paperwork to fill out and once you are listed as active, it shows a jumpseater on the AWABS. Now, it takes a pilot to do his job and actually see it listed, but that prompts the question, "Where's the jumpseater?"
One of the cool things about manual W&B.Exactly.
I've prompted the captains on this a number of times.
I liked it better when we got the AWABS before we handed over the release. That way, it was always nice to tell them, "We either take a delay until you can bring us new paperwork, the jumpseater or both of us sit here and ponder what to do."
Non-benefitted Ready Reserve agents that work as little as once a month with an overly complex and antiquated computer system....so says my retired agent wife and her ATL based former NWA agent sister. Just say'in.
Just found out we're going to agl instead of Msl. Seriously!?I think in general the best way to do something is the exact opposite of the procedure AA developed.
A quick, "Funny, I didn't realize I had calculated the weight and balance already" makes the point. The dispatcher may run the numbers and say it is planned to be weight restricted, but you'd think the gate agents would know the difference between planned and actual.
Non-benefitted Ready Reserve agents that work as little as once a month with an overly complex and antiquated computer system....so says my retired agent wife and her ATL based former NWA agent sister. Just say'in.
Just found out we're going to agl instead of Msl. Seriously!?
Just found out we're going to agl instead of Msl. Seriously!?
Yes and they are dragging us down with them.They are still doing that???