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Old School

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 17, 2005
Posts
115
Kudos to the Delta Captain and First Officer who supported me yesterday in Orlando after the gate agent accidently deleted my cass entries and lost my paperwork at push time. Not sure exactly what they did to drag their feet until it worked out but with the rest of the flights oversold, I got a lot of extra time with my kids because of these two pilots.
 
I am not Delta but am glad to see that there are some stand-up folks out there still willing to see a wrong, righted.
I had a Eagle captain come out to the podium about a year ago now and have quite an argument with the agent about his takeoff weight that he was going to adjust to get me on the flight home and to give me a ticket. The weather had improved dramatically and he could fill up the plane. He of course had to get dispatch to do all this, but he could have easily blown me off and pushed, but he didn't. The agent was not a happy camper seeing me get on that plane. It was very cool and I thanked him profusely.
 
In 1998 I was flying a Baron for Airnet. I was based in Omaha and was fortunate to be able to jumpseat on Southwest and get home to Houston on the weekends. It was a major deal for me to be able to get back to the family and a wife who was just completing school at the time, even if for a couple of days.
One such trip home really stands out to this day. I completed my run at around 6 am after having flown 6.8 hours with over 10 hours of duty. I rushed to the terminal to get home only to find that the flight was full and there was already a jumpseater there. The Captain welcomed us both on board and I was thrilled at the thought of getting home.
As we were getting strapped in there were introductions and it turns out that the other pilot was a 757 driver for XXX airlines. The Captain asked me what I did and I told him that I was a BE58 Baron pilot. The 757 guy, who had a very large build to put it nicely said "man, its already cramped in here. I can't believe that Im sharing a jumpseats with a friggen Baron pilot..."

The Captain didnt skip a beat, turned around and said to Mr 757, "well then..why don't you get the f$@k off of my airplane..." Which he did, grumbling the whole way.

I got to go home.
 
did they end up delaying a flight with paying paxs?

If they did, it's unfortunate. Unfortunate that it has gotten to the point that a Captain has to drag his feet to delay a flight just to make sure he takes care of one of his own. Not so long ago the agents looked after the crews, and the crews looked after the agents. Then the bean counters and numbers people got in the mix, and now all you hear about when there's a delay is, "OK, who's going to take it?" Good for you, Captain and crew. Always happy to hear about a crew who is willing to take on the agents/gatekeepers/ops people to make sure the right thing gets done. It does my heart good to hear about people taking care of their own. You can make bank on the fact that nobody else will.

Flying Corporal... Obviously,
1) You don't commute.
2) You haven't been in this business long enough to understand what we have all lost in terms of "being on the same team" in the past several years.
3) So what if they were 5 minutes late off the gate? They more than likely still blocked in early, and a fellow wayward traveler got to spend an extra night with his family. Well worth it in my opinion, and I would be happy to defend my point of view to a Chief Pilot any day of the week.

Good on you, Delta crew. And, might I add, as a group you have always gone way out of your way to make this particular NWA commuter feel very much at home. I have never felt the slightest bit unwelcome in your jumpseat, even in the most stressful of times over the last year or so. I thank you, and my family thanks you. I can only hope that the commuters among you have had similarly positive experiences on our aircraft.
 
Last edited:
did they end up delaying a flight with paying paxs?

If so, good. The crew didn't delay the flight, the bumbling agent delayed the flight. The crew simply refused to make sacrifices to cover for the agent. As it should be.

"We'll leave only when [whatever] is taken care of." It's amazing how fast stuff can get done.
 
Fwiw.....

If so, good. The crew didn't delay the flight, the bumbling agent delayed the flight. The crew simply refused to make sacrifices to cover for the agent. As it should be.

"We'll leave only when [whatever] is taken care of." It's amazing how fast stuff can get done.

For what it's worth, I have noticed in MCO and other DAL locations that they are down to one gate agent to board a 767 aircraft, by themselves. It appears to
be no small feat to answer all the questions, keep the que moving by zones and try and ensure the nonrevs and jumpseaters are accounted for. They have my respect, I'd say on a daily basis, their job is far more stressful than the average pilots trip!
Merry Christmas, and by all means, Happy Festivus!
 

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