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-   -   Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide (http://www.travelbanter.com/showthread.php?t=7870)

a b c February 29th, 2004 05:32 PM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide

25.02.2004
By LOUISA CLEAVE

Thirteen Air New Zealand cabin crew members were flown home from the
United States without their passengers after witnessing a suicide on
their way to work.

Passengers booked on flight NZ3 from Los Angeles to Auckland on Sunday
were put on other Air New Zealand flights after the incident, said Ed
Sims, general manager international airline.

The crew was in a minibus on the way to LAX when a person jumped off
an overbridge and landed on their vehicle.

The person then fell on the highway into the path of traffic.

Mr Sims said the crew went to assist but the person was dead and they
were "faced with a horrific scene".

The highway was closed while emergency services removed the body and
the crew assisted before continuing to LAX, he said.

The pilots had travelled separately to the airport.

Air New Zealand said it was notified "within minutes" of the incident
and a chief medical officer liaised with the crew, their in-flight
service director and the airport manager.

Some staff were visibly shaken, said Mr Sims.

"Although some of them said they were okay to undertake their shift on
NZ3, it was possible delayed shock might set in. Therefore, the
airline was not prepared to put their wellbeing and customer service
delivery and safety at risk."

The decision was made to fly the Boeing 747-400 back to Auckland with
only the 13 crew and in-flight service director on board. An airline
spokesman said the cost of flying the aircraft home without passengers
would have been "up to $50,000".

Mr Sims said the passengers due to fly on NZ3 would have experienced
delays of up to four hours.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydispl...ection=general

Mutlley February 29th, 2004 07:57 PM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
a b c wrote:

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide

25.02.2004
By LOUISA CLEAVE

Thirteen Air New Zealand cabin crew members were flown home from the
United States without their passengers after witnessing a suicide on
their way to work.

Passengers booked on flight NZ3 from Los Angeles to Auckland on Sunday
were put on other Air New Zealand flights after the incident, said Ed
Sims, general manager international airline.

The crew was in a minibus on the way to LAX when a person jumped off
an overbridge and landed on their vehicle.

The person then fell on the highway into the path of traffic.

Mr Sims said the crew went to assist but the person was dead and they
were "faced with a horrific scene".

Gee. What a precious lot. I guess they will need counseling on some
sunny beach for a month before they return to work.

Talk about a pampered group of workers.

David Bailey February 29th, 2004 08:18 PM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
All credit to Air New Zealand for their sensitivity to the crew's mental
well being.
I wonder how the delayed passengers felt or if it was explained to them at
al?

Either way, airline management deserve credit for putting the well being of
their
personnel above the monetary cost of bringing them home. It must have been
a logistical nightmare.

db

"a b c" wrote in message
. ..
Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide

25.02.2004
By LOUISA CLEAVE

Thirteen Air New Zealand cabin crew members were flown home from the
United States without their passengers after witnessing a suicide on
their way to work.

Passengers booked on flight NZ3 from Los Angeles to Auckland on Sunday
were put on other Air New Zealand flights after the incident, said Ed
Sims, general manager international airline.

The crew was in a minibus on the way to LAX when a person jumped off
an overbridge and landed on their vehicle.

The person then fell on the highway into the path of traffic.

Mr Sims said the crew went to assist but the person was dead and they
were "faced with a horrific scene".

The highway was closed while emergency services removed the body and
the crew assisted before continuing to LAX, he said.

The pilots had travelled separately to the airport.

Air New Zealand said it was notified "within minutes" of the incident
and a chief medical officer liaised with the crew, their in-flight
service director and the airport manager.

Some staff were visibly shaken, said Mr Sims.

"Although some of them said they were okay to undertake their shift on
NZ3, it was possible delayed shock might set in. Therefore, the
airline was not prepared to put their wellbeing and customer service
delivery and safety at risk."

The decision was made to fly the Boeing 747-400 back to Auckland with
only the 13 crew and in-flight service director on board. An airline
spokesman said the cost of flying the aircraft home without passengers
would have been "up to $50,000".

Mr Sims said the passengers due to fly on NZ3 would have experienced
delays of up to four hours.


http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydispl...section=news&t
hesubsection=general



Alan February 29th, 2004 10:48 PM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
On Mon, 01 Mar 2004 08:57:47 +1300, Mutlley
wrote:

Gee. What a precious lot. I guess they will need counseling on some
sunny beach for a month before they return to work.


Put it the other way around.

If they had done nothing and continued as usual, can you see the scene
in the courtroom where one of the passengers disliked the service for
some reason and decided to sue? Bearing in mind they were flying out of
litigation central?

Wise move to spend $50k and avoid possibly much more.

Cheers Alan


Raffi Balmanoukian February 29th, 2004 11:32 PM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
in article . rogers.com,
David Bailey at wrote on 2/29/04 4:18 PM:

All credit to Air New Zealand for their sensitivity to the crew's mental
well being.
I wonder how the delayed passengers felt or if it was explained to them at
al?


I, for one, would have been completely ticked. Sure, it sounds insensitive,
but crap happens. Do they cancel a flight if the pilot's dog dies? No? I
would think that would affect the pilot a lot more than some stranger while
you were in the wrong place at the wrong time.

OTOH, I can understand a particular crew member objecting to taking the
flight because that specific person felt too traumatized to take on his/her
duties at the time. If the airline is going to have the laudable policy of
accommodating that, they should have enough redundancy at a major gateway
like LAX so that a 747-load isn't prejudiced as a result.


Mutlley February 29th, 2004 11:33 PM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
Alan wrote:

On Mon, 01 Mar 2004 08:57:47 +1300, Mutlley
wrote:

Gee. What a precious lot. I guess they will need counseling on some
sunny beach for a month before they return to work.


Put it the other way around.

If they had done nothing and continued as usual, can you see the scene
in the courtroom where one of the passengers disliked the service for
some reason and decided to sue? Bearing in mind they were flying out of
litigation central?

Wise move to spend $50k and avoid possibly much more.

Cheers Alan


So what's new.??? In 1990 when I flew from LA to NZ via ANZ we were
one day late leaving. Boy did the cabin crew bitch that they were
going to lose a day Skiing. Needles to say the service was not ****
hot as it was on the way over ..Don't think anyone sued them..

John Ewing March 1st, 2004 12:38 AM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 

"Mutlley" wrote in message
...
a b c wrote:

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide

25.02.2004
By LOUISA CLEAVE

Thirteen Air New Zealand cabin crew members were flown home from the
United States without their passengers after witnessing a suicide on
their way to work.

Passengers booked on flight NZ3 from Los Angeles to Auckland on Sunday
were put on other Air New Zealand flights after the incident, said Ed
Sims, general manager international airline.

The crew was in a minibus on the way to LAX when a person jumped off
an overbridge and landed on their vehicle.

The person then fell on the highway into the path of traffic.

Mr Sims said the crew went to assist but the person was dead and they
were "faced with a horrific scene".

Gee. What a precious lot. I guess they will need counseling on some
sunny beach for a month before they return to work.

Talk about a pampered group of workers.


Pampered ?? Really?

So you would return to work and just dismiss it as an unhappy event?
Wow - now that's impressive.

If you want to really consider workers having a lend of the system then
consider the many thousands of working days are lost each year by people
taking sickies due entirely to their overindulgence of alcohol - and having
someone else pay them for their day off.

John



steve March 1st, 2004 01:46 AM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
David Bailey wrote:

All credit to Air New Zealand for their sensitivity to the crew's mental
well being.
I wonder how the delayed passengers felt or if it was explained to them at
al?

Either way, airline management deserve credit for putting the well being
of their
personnel above the monetary cost of bringing them home.**It*must*have
been a logistical nightmare.

db


The safety of passengers could have also been at stake.....given how
distracted the cabin crew could/would have been.

steve March 1st, 2004 01:49 AM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
Mutlley wrote:

Gee.**What*a*precious*lot.**I*guess*they*will*need *counseling*on*some
sunny beach for a month before they return to work.

Talk about a pampered group of workers.


Not at all.

Had an emergency situation developed on their flight, a distracted cabin
crew could well have not noticed until too late - placing the safety of
everyone at risk.

A small chance....but at what point do you decide the risk isn't worth it?

Air NZ hasn't lost a plane for decades.




steve March 1st, 2004 01:49 AM

Air NZ crew heads home alone after LA suicide
 
John Ewing wrote:

Pampered ??**Really?

So you would return to work and just dismiss it as an unhappy event?
Wow - now that's impressive.


Mutley isn't known for being the sensitive type.



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