Flight attendants — unsung heroes 8 years later

by Charlie Leocha on September 11, 2009

flightattendants
Over the eight years since 9/11, there have been many ceremonies, new memorials, congressional plaudits and remembrances for those who died in that day’s tragic events.

Police officers, firefighters and other first responders gather every year with politicians on stages across America. Yet few remember that the first casualties of the terrorist attacks were flight attendants. Sadly, airline crewmembers are almost never included in the tributes.

That’s a shame.

I’ve said so on every anniversary of the September attacks, and I’ll say it again this year.

Airline flight attendants are the unsung heroes and frontline foot soldiers in this country’s “war on terrorism.” Though experts cannot predict when there will be another terrorist attack, they can all agree that one will come. New plans are certainly being tested to attack our transportation systems.

The stress on our airline systems has increased and will only get worse. And yet flight attendants continue to report to work every day, ready to do what they can to keep us safe. Unfortunately, the traveling public takes them for granted.

Every time a plane takes off, every time a traveler stands up and walks toward the cockpit, and every time the captain exits the flight deck to use the facilities, flight attendants go on alert.

Eight years ago, immediately after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the media was filled with stories about “real heroes” — rescuers, police and firefighters who risked their lives to save workers in those buildings. The firefighters, EMTs and police deserve every accolade they receive. However, flight attendants should be praised as well.

Flight attendants face potential danger every time they go to work. Where once their main purpose was to see to in-flight comforts and provide knowledgeable assistance in case of an emergency landing, their new job requirements are much more nerve-racking. Worse, their work is almost always taken for granted.

What once was an airborne world of giddy tourists and grumpy businessmen is now could be a war zone without notice. Trouble — perhaps deadly trouble — could break out in the cabin at any time. Maybe not today. Maybe not tomorrow. But perhaps someday.

New terrorist dangers are unknown. So unknown, in fact, that the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Aviation Administration, and other government organizations still cannot predict where, when or how an attack will take place.

While passengers grumble about the inconvenience of waiting in long security lines, taking off our shoes, putting liquids in checked baggage, being stripped naked by by backscatter scanning machines, and having our luggage and bodies probed, most of us have decided to fly anyway, at least to places that are important to us. We have that choice. Flight attendants don’t. If they want to continue being paid, they have to go to work.

The same is true of pilots, of course. But pilots are now barricaded inside their cockpits. Some have been given stun guns and others have been trained to carry firearms. But what are flight attendants getting?

Not much. Before captains lock themselves in the cockpit, they now basically tell the flight attendants that they will have to fend for themselves. They don’t have much choice — most everyone agrees that the cockpit door must stay locked.

Yes, some airlines now train flight attendants in the basics of self-defense: skills like coordinating with other flight attendants, maintaining distance, assuming a protective body position, and dealing with unruly passengers. Some airlines even offer advanced programs — on a voluntary basis — but the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) still, eight years later, hasn’t designed a system for evaluating this training and, worse, flight attendants still have a hard time getting time off to attend.

As for public recognition, there’s been almost nothing. Instead, what flight attendants have seen since I first wrote this story eight years ago is a continuing series of layoffs, downsizings and reductions in pay.

Are our memories so short?

Flight attendants were the most consistent source of information on 9/11 when, at the risk of their lives, they phoned airline operations personnel to let them know about the hijackings; they even provided seat numbers and descriptions of the hijackers. Flight attendants were most certainly involved with the in-cabin attack on the terrorists aboard United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed in the fields of Pennsylvania instead of into a building on Pennsylvania Avenue.

Later, in one of the few instances of terrorism thwarted in the act, a diminutive flight attendant physically prevented a fanatic from lighting a fuse to a shoe-bomb that would have downed American Airlines Flight 63 in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

So, let’s get our priorities straight.

Baggage screeners earn between $25,000 and $38,000 a year. TSA supervisors earn $45,000 to $70,000 a year. Federal air marshals make between $36,000 and $85,000 a year. These workers receive all the standard government perks of medical care, vacations and insurance. Meanwhile, flight attendants, the airlines’ real frontline troops, receive starting salaries of $18,000 a year, or less, and don’t have a prayer of seeing $30,000 for at least three years. Vacation time in those years is meager, while time “on reserve” (waiting around in case another flight attendant is sick or gets stuck in traffic) seems to be endless.

To add insult to paltry pay, over the past three years many flight attendants have had their retirement programs and pensions stripped from them by their airlines as they pay executives millions of dollars in bonuses.

For years, we have heard the flight attendant mantra, “We are here for your safety.” Now those words are truer than ever. And safety, today, means far more than helping with oxygen masks, securing the overhead compartments, checking seat belts and opening emergency doors.

Let’s face it: Federal air marshals are not on most flights. While the plane is in the air, flight attendants are our final line of defense. They may be serving peanuts, pretzels and drinks, but they are constantly on watch until touchdown at the final destination.

Today’s flight attendants face what amounts to nonstop battle stress from an unidentified, furtive and unpredictable enemy.

I, for one, thank them for their service. All of us who fly should thank them as well.

Photo: Mujitra/Flickr/Commons

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  • http://Barbaragoodwin.com Barbara Goodwin

    Thank you so much for your continued articles reminding people that flight attendants are overlooked, underpaid, and generally treated as invisible. Your kind words are much appreciated.

    Barbara Goodwin
    American Airlines Flight Attendant

  • http://www.musicetc.us Anne – Music and Markets

    Thank you for this reminder – wish ALL travelers could read it!

  • Lee Meechan

    I agree 100% with this and i don’t see why pilots earn so much so pushing buttons,pulling leavers and so on, yet cabin crew earn very little.

  • kelley

    Charlie, if my next flight has a “frontline troops” surcharge, I’m going to think of you…

  • David Rorke

    And this is why I would love to have that honour to become a flight attendant. An intelligent reading for all.

    Thank you !

  • Bodega

    Please forgive me, but I use to think of a flight attendant as a glorified waitress or waiter. Remember the slogan, Coffee, Tea or Me? Then in 1990, while at Sabre training at American Headquaters in Dallas, I took a tour of the flight attendants facilities and they had us sit in on an emergency training excerise. I came away with a new found respect for the job they are prepared to do in an emergency, in addition to the various aspects of their job that most of us see while on a flight. I compare them to nurses. While the doctor directs your care, like a pilot flys the plane, it is the nurse and flight attendant that tends to our immediate needs and will be the ones immediately at our side to assist us in an emergency. I always say thank you to them as I deplane,

  • http://www.Theflyingpinto.com Sara

    Thank you;-)

    Lee, I know you feel cabin crew deserve more, rightly so, but I think it’s a mistake to wonder why pilots earn so much..I believe they deserve every penny.

  • http://nodebtworldtravel.com brian from nodebtworldtravel.com

    @Lee Meechan
    I agree that flight attendants do a great job and should be paid more, but let’s not trivialize what pilots do. There is a reason they go through thousands of hours of training and flying. Flying a jumbo jet is a lot more than pushing buttons and pulling levers.

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  • http://www.Theflyingpinto.com Sara

    Thank you for a great article!

  • M. Darcy – Former flight attendant

    Well deserved tribute!
    Hope it’s ok, I posted the link on my facebook page.
    Thanks so much!

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  • http://christineyoungny.wordpress.com/ Christine Young

    My beautiful old friend Deborah Jacobs Welsh was the chief purser on Flight 93. Nobody ever hears about her. I’ve written about Debbie on my blog. http://christineyoungny.wordpress.com/

  • Jody

    Thank you for the passionate article. Another thing I thought about while reading this is how the flight attendants calm the passengers and hide any fears they have. Imagine being an attendant on the flights that were in the air on 9/11……even those that were not being high-jacked once it was clear we were under a terrorist attack.

  • Randy Baker

    Thank you Mr. Leocha for your continued support. As an International Flight Attendant on the frontline, it is nice to receive some recognition for what we do. Thank you again.

  • Kelley Harris

    Thank you so much for your kind words.
    Kelley Harris
    American Airlines Flight Attendant
    22 years

  • Bette Shadel

    Thank you so much for remembering the flight attendants. My daughter is one and I worry about her every time she flies, but she loves it and willingly accepts the danger that goes along with her job.. She is so professional and dedicated that I really try to keep my worries to myself. I want her to know how very proud of her we are.

  • marcus

    great article, thanks a lot, as a flight attendant myself, i can no agree more with you and how the goverment and the general public who travel have a little or no respect for us the flight attendants at all. and it shows everyday. its a battle to make passangers to complied with rules and regulations. again, i wish the goverment put more pressure to the airline and ceo’s to provide us with a better pay, pensions, etc. and for travelers to give us the respect we deserve. thanks…

  • http://www.consumertraveler.com ORDSW

    Excellent way of letting people know of how a flight aatendant is treated in the industry, and how under paid we are for such a risky job at times we have! Great article ….
    UNITED AIRLINES
    ORDSW

  • Martha Caruana

    I too say Thank You when I get off the plane each time I fly. I also thought of them as “glorified waitreses” but look at them differently now. Whenever I watch the events of 9/11, which I have a zillion times since then, I often think of what went through their minds when they realized they were going to perish. A BRAVO for all of the flight attendants who courageously risk their life everytime they board a plane.

  • Betsy, flight attendant

    Thank You so much for the article, I am very proud to be a flight attendant. I am so happy you wrote this article, especially because I feel the crews on 9/11 are never mentioned. I feel the pilots do work as hard as the flight attendants, they also have to spend alot of money in school to even become a pilot, let alone all of the flight hours. In all honesty, when the flight deck door shuts we are the front line. Thank You again for such a great article

  • Garry

    I always take a few extra minutes to think about the flight crews on those four airplanes back on 9/11/2001. Many people forget, or are unaware, that pilots and flight attendants were the first to give their lives, before any planes reached their targets.

    Married to an F/A

  • LB

    Thank you so much for your story. You’re right, we’re still on high alert when a passenger heads towards the cockpit. To us, Sept 11 is still very fresh in our minds. Passengers need to know this and where we’re coming from when we tell them to go back and use the bathroom in their cabin and not to congregate around the cockpit.
    Right after Sept 11 I would get free bus rides while going to work in my uniform. The bus drivers would praise my bravery and say I was a hero for going to work so soon after. I never considered myself a hero.
    Thank you again for a wonderful story.

  • stacy fisher

    As a flight attendant I would first like to say thank you for your kind and thoughtful words, we flight attendants don’t hear nice things like this very often.

    Every year as 9-11 rolls around I sit watch tv and remember where I and my fellow co-workers were on that very sad day. I can’t help but wonder each year why there is no mention of the flight attendants that fought so hard and lost their lives while simply doing their job.
    We flight attendants do understand that protecting the flying public is what our job is all about, this is what we are trained to do and yes little as the pay may be we are getting paid to do it.
    As flight attendants we know, we understand, and we accept the risks that come with the job, that being said I do however fail to see how this being our job makes the value of our lives any less than that of the people whom we are here to protect.
    It is beyond me how anyone could think it acceptable year after year to make no mention of the brave flight attendants who died just trying to do their job and save the lives of the people on those airplanes. I can’t imagine the courage it must have taken for Those flight attendants to put their own fears and worries aside so that they might help others. They are heros just as the fireman, the policeman, and all the many others are who died on that very sad day. To think they were all just trying to do their job and save lives. Shame on us if we ever forget. To all whom have fallen RIP.
    I have hope that maybe one day people will come to understand and respect the important role that flight attendants play when it comes to the safety on our airplanes.
    Thanks once again..
    Happy flying!

  • Mike, US Airways F/A

    I too would like to echo the many words of thanks put forth by my fellow Flight Attendants. It is always nice to see anything nice written about our profession. These days it seems like everyone has not only forgotten about the F/As on the 9/11 planes, but that it even happened. I can’t even begin to count the number of times people have rolled their eyes at me or given me a sarcastic or rude remark when I ask them to do something security related. (or safety related for that matter) I am also appreciative for your mention of our sometimes very low pay and poor treatment by our companies. As a reserve for my entire career as an F/A thus far and what could very well be the remainder of my time in the skies I am certainly feeling the pain of what you touched on brought on by the shrinking industry and economic downturn. Thanks again for being one of the glimmers of hope out there for us!

  • William R. Waitkus

    Sadly the traveling public just don’t seem to get it…security is important only if they are not inconveinced by it…

    You should see the raction from first class passengers when we block off THEIR precious private lavatory to allow the pilots a short break to relieve themselves…IT’S NOT SECRET WHAT WE ARE DOING, NO EXPLANATION IS NECESSARY! Yet this is the time that they chhose to ask for a drink, meal or get up to open the OHD compartment or worse try to bully their way into the lav. Happens on every flight. AND you should see the reaction from a coach class pax when I “cross” my arms and sternly tell them to go back….again, NO EXPLANATION NECESSARY!

    William R. Waitkus
    USAirways F/A

  • Sam

    I also echo the sentiments of my fellow flight attendants. It’s nice just to be recognized in an industry that people take us for granted. I’ve been flying for 9 years and it VERY rare to be compliments for the job we do, much less be appreciated for the risk we take everytime we step on an airplane.

    As for a flight attendants pay yes I believe we can all agree that this job is far too high risk for the megar salary that we recieve. So the government should definately put more pressure on the airline industry to be considered and treated as professionals as in any other industry. We should never forget our fallen flight attendants. If only the public could see our job through our eyes. Maybe then and only then we would get the respect that we so deserve. God bless the flight attendants and pilots for risking their lives everytime they have to go to work.

    Sam
    American Airlines FA

  • Elizabeth O’Malley

    Thank you so much!

    United Flight Attendant who lost a friend and colleagues on 9/11.

  • M. A.

    “Sir it’s the fasten seatbelt sign” “Please turn off your phone Mam”, “We need to push ur bag under the seat in front of you, so it won’t block your way in case you need to get out of here fast”, Overwing–”I need your full attention please…” so on and so forth.. How many times have I seen eyes rolling, smirks, snide remarks to all different levels enough to make one feel that all this precautions are for naught!!
    Thank you for this article. We truly wish we could make your flying experience just as wonderful and comfortable..but there are measures that needs to met. Bottomline, we are here for you to have a more wonderful experience to whomever and wherever you’ll be with and at soon as you step out of those aircraft doors.
    As we remember 9/11 and the crew who flew those flights; let’s show and honor the families they’ve left behind, especially their children that all their efforts are treasured dearly.
    The Hudson river crew is just an example..that we have not given up..and we’re not going away..we too are here to serve!!!
    Thank you for treating us all with dignity.
    -AmericaWest/Usairways

  • Darren Sasano

    Thank you Mr. Leocha for recognizing our role and plight as Flight Attendants. With the cutbacks in customer service, the new extra charges that airlines have implemented, and enhanced inflight Federal Air Regulations Flight Attendants have become the lightning rod for the traveling public’s frustration. Quite often we are taken for granted, unrecognized, and even abused by both the public and our own company. Our primary reason for being on the plane is for passenger safety which many seem to think it’s an option to obey or disobey our instructions, signs, and placards. But most of us realize that it is our job to keep our customers satisfied and want to fly with us again. It is getting increasingly challenging to do so with what our company is doing to us and our customers. Thank you again for an insightful piece of writing.

  • B. Yantis

    As a FA for a great Airline, I thank you in advance for keeping US alive in this article. Yes, we are there, “For Your Safety.”

    B.Yantis
    SWA Flight Attendant

  • Mary Esther West

    Thank you so much for your article. Although I could never forget 9/11, so many people have. I’m glad great writers like you are out there reminding them.

  • Robye

    As a Flight Attendant of 10 years, Thank You.

  • Kasey

    Thank you so much for writing that beautiful statement, what you said is absolutly true, as a flight attendant you may be the lone fa on a 34 seater plane or an fa on a crew of 14 or more and each one deserves recognition, so thank you! I for one walk into Newark liberty airport everyday, luggage in hand and stand looking out the windows into the city where the wtc was once, and thank god my coworkers are taking back the sky!

    Kasey
    Continental airlines

  • Liz

    As a Flight attendant, after reading this article, YOU are my hero Charlie! . Thank you so much for writing it!

  • Noelle

    Thank you Mr. Leocha,
    You have kept your promise in remembering.
    Your articulation of words and passion for revealing the truth has helped open the eye’s of many, to whom we work hard to protect everyday.
    I for one, feel very much seen, and most importantly dignified for the work that I do in reading your article’s.
    It too, is my wish that all passengers would have the same acknowledgment and understanding for what we really do and more importantly WHO we ARE as Flight Attendants.
    Thank You,
    Noelle
    Flight Attendant with United for 12 years

  • Nichole Cowling

    As a former f/a, I also appreciate this article. It’s nice to know that someone (besides other f/a’s) understand our real job and the difficulties faced each time a f/a goes to work. Thanks so much for this piece. Next time you see one, thank a flight attendant!!
    Nichole – former Continental Flight Attendant

  • Sarah, Flight Attendant

    I was surprised to hear from a pilot that they did not have to practice evacuating people from a dangerous situation on a plane. Flight attendants are the specialists in the cabin, no questions asked. They have had serious crisis training. I know I have dealt with plenty of medical emergencies, but thankfully no major security issues. Flight attendants are on the front lines, for that I have much sympathy for all of those who perished on Sept. 11th.

  • http://www.labradorgrafix.com Doug Scott

    Like so many have already said, Thank YOU for the recognition that we so very rarely get.
    It’s sad how something so simple, and FREE, is the LAST thing we get from many passengers and Most of our managers/employers.

    You have added a light to the dark memories of 9/11/01

  • Ryan-Female;-}

    As a former flight attendant for 3 airlines including working during the time of 9/11, I remember vividly what it was like before and what it was like after that horrible day. Passengers went from not caring, to hospitable and caring, slowly going back to not caring anymore. I agree with the article completely. The pay, the long tedious hours, the disgruntled passengers who by the time they get to you are so ticked off(delays, luggage, cost of tickets, no food/snacks, lack of pillows/blankets) they are ready to go postal-why do we do this you may ask? For the small bits of gratitude and the love of taking care of our passengers. Three days after 9/11(which was on a Tuesday) I flew out the morning of 9/14(Friday), 0420 showtime and 5 flights that day. FAA had just opened up the skies to fly those that were stranded, we flew back and forth through New York and Baltimore. After a LONG, scary day my crew and I made our way into the hotel on our layover in Albany, NY. My FO(First Officer) and I walked into the lobby where there was a cocktail party for some company going on. As soon as we walked in, everyone stopped what they were doing and started clapping. This, THIS is why we do what we do, because in the end, yes it is our job, but we love doing it!

    Thank you for the wonderful article,

    Sincerely,
    R. Rakestraw
    Former Flight Attendant, Potomac Air, United Airways-Express, Maxjet

  • Laura

    Thank you Charlie!

  • John Frasca

    September 11, 2009 was my thirty-fifth anniversary as a flight attendant. Since that horrible day in 2001, I have seen the apathy, rolled eyes, smart comments and overt rudeness shown to my colleagues and myself by some (not all) passengers. I attended the funerals of several of the pilots and flight attendants that died on AA77 on 9/11 and the memory of those heartbreaking services are seared in my mind. There were many hundreds of airline personnel from every airline, all in full uniform, to show their respect and to acknowledge the unique affection we have for each other. I saw grizzled old captains and tough cabin veterans like myself reduced to sobbing tears at these services because we knew full well what our colleagues had endured. They KNEW what was coming yet they stayed professional and attempted to save their passengers and aircraft. The official 9/11 reports states that flight attendants went far beyond the scope of their duties and training on that day in advising flight operations of the seat assignments of the hijackers and what was occuring onboard. As always our primary strength is that unique camaradarie that airline employees have and the pride in their industry and professions. I am humbled to be a part of such a wonderful group of people. They are true American heroes.

  • Debbie Lee

    Two words… Thank you!

  • http://Facebook Karen Shows

    Thank you so much. Wanted so much to write something the other day but you said it all. Continental F/A

  • Cortney

    This is a great article. I have been a flight attendant for 3 years now and LOVE it. It still bugs me that when i have to travel on an airline for work, how many people still think of us there to serve them coke and peanuts, if some could see the training we go through now to help keep them safe. Its great to read an article like this. I have showed this article to my crew that i am with now, and we all would love to thank you!

  • Laura

    My former co-worker & friend, Alicia Titus, left the relatively safe world of Silicon Valley start-ups to find some adventure & see a little more of the world. Alicia had been working for United for only 9 months when she was murdered on United 175. She was only 28 years old. I know without any doubt in my mind that she did everything in her power to protect and bring comfort to the passengers on that flight. Alicia and all the flight crews from that day deserve the same recognition that all the first responders received and the public needs to acknowledge that what F/As do is so much more than beverage service.

  • Emily Ceshker

    I am so proud to read this article and thank you for writing it. I have so often thought of the fact that flt. att.’s are never or briefly mentioned. I personally have saved the lives of several passengers landing at different destinations as an emergency, one which was last month. I did receive recognition, by PAA when I did what I truly was there for “save a life”. The most tragic was when an airplane crashed into the mountain of St. Thomas (virgin islands) I was the purser and directed our crew to help pax’s off…for that and other incidents we were recognized. I have since saved the life of a handful of Pax at present airline and although, we say we are there to make sure you are secure…I have yet had a recognition or a thanks…I do it because I truly, no matter what, will take care of that which I am responsible for…our Pax’s…
    Again with great respect and admiration I thank you for taking the time to write this.
    Emily Ceshker

  • Michelle (former flight att.)

    I’m glad someone recognizes what flight attendants are doing. Most people do think they are there to wait on them. Great article!!

  • Derwin

    Thank you for this Article. its not a day go by that i think we don’t get the respect we reserve day in and out. Yes passengers do not take us for granted that we are there to help save their lives. We ask for them to do one simple thing and its always a rude remark on the back end. so again i want to thank u for this article.

  • Debora

    Charlie,
    Thank you for realizing what we do. So many people don’t care to know what we are really there for, they just want someone to wait on them and cater to their needs, sometimes as if they are the only one onboard. Some dislike authority, especially from a woman. If only they could be made aware of the purpose to the rules set in place for them and their loved ones, for survivorship. I am a 29 year veteran on the front lines with the flying public, and have dealt with numerous medical’s, angry people, passengers from mental institutions, fear of flying passengers, children traveling alone, drunks, drug users, death of a loved one,
    the soldier going or coming back, and the obese and the handicap, and even a terrorists onboard. It takes a special employee to deal with the general public in an enclose capsule. Believe me, I know first hand.
    I get told often, ” I couldn’t do what you do for a living, and do it as well as you do with so much compassion.” To all of them who see this, I wish you extend to you a great big “THANK YOU.”
    Yes, I will do my best to help you and to SAVE you. Yes, it’s my job, but more, it’s to love thy neighbor as thy self. To be a good human being.
    But I will not be abused, unjustly touched, or irrationally treated. I have self-worth and I have self-respect. I am a mother, daughter, wife, volunteer, and an educated person of value. My reminder to those who don’t see us, but only the uniform.
    So here is to all my fellow flight attendants, you ARE hero’s !
    Hero’s on many levels, every time you fly.
    Your a unique group of people. You deserve so much more both financially and
    emotionally.

    Credos’ to you Charlie for bringing this subject to more light.
    I pray daily for world peace and for my next flight to be safe and to bring me back home to my family and friends that I love and adore, who need me, as I need them.

    P.S. To “Kelley” who wrote about the “surcharge” for the” frontline troops,”
    guess what Kelley?? You don’t pay for what it “truly” costs to fly now, as it is.
    Have you ever really thought about what you get for the price of your ticket?
    Take some time and think about it,…. all the people, all the products, all the gas, all the safety precautions in place, perhaps the food and a movie or two, the crew, the cleaners, the baggage handlers, the gate agents , the reservationists, the computer software, the clean airport, the air marshals, the aircraft mechanics, to name a few……the list goes on and on. Get REAL. I can go out to 3 star restaurant, leave a tip, be in my new outfit, pay for the gas round trip, and it will cost me around $200 or more. There are tickets for less than that ! Flying is one heck of a good deal, and your very lucky to have “frontline troops”.

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