Fired or Quit, it was time to go
Steven Slater says he quit jetBlue. jetBlue says he’s no longer with the company and comments no more on the subject.
Regardless of the circumstances behind Slater’s official departure from jetBlue, it was time for him to go.
It was time for him to go because he clearly had reached a point in his career where dealing with problematic passengers was more of a problem than he was perhaps prepared to tolerate. I’ve said it once already but I’ll say it again: The big shame in this episode is that the passenger wasn’t criticized more for their behaviour and banned from the airline. All too often airlines accept that kind of behaviour tacitly in the belief that it will scare away customers. I myself suspect it might only scare away the people you don’t want as customers to begin with. My strongest suspicion is that it will scare no one away.
It was time for him to go because jetBlue can’t have that kind of liability in the air. Once Mr. Slater acted out in public like that and abused emergency systems for his grand exit, he was a liability. What if he did something again and this time is resulted in harm against a passenger or co-worker? He created a record of not being in control of himself and that’s a liability for his employer.
That said, jetBlue missed an opportunity to back its other employees and demonstrate that while bad behaviour from employees won’t be tolerated, nor will bad behaviour from passengers. I truly believe it would have been a strong morale booster and it would have raised respect for jetBlue yet another notch.
But it was time to go.
…jetBlue missed an opportunity to back its other employees and demonstrate that while bad behaviour from employees won’t be tolerated, nor will bad behaviour from passengers.
The Customer is always right, even if s/he is frequently an asshole.
-R
(still driving, thanks)
“The customer is always right.” is not a philosophy I subscribe to. Sometimes they are wrong and sometimes their behaviour is childish. If we wouldn’t put up with it in a restaurant, why put up with it on an aircraft?
If we wouldn’t put up with it in a restaurant, why put up with it on an aircraft?
You’re preaching to the choir, Greg… Sadly, I think you’re also swimming against the tide. If it were up to me, the miscreant that abused Slater would be in leg-irons in prison – it’s the least JetSnooze could do, given what happens to passengers who get on the wrong side of an FA who’s having a bad day – but it ain’t up to you or me.
Airlines are too cowardly to lose the revenue of even one seat in sub-sub-sub-coach, and the idiots *know* it.
But let’s look at another idea: Could passengers with ‘tude be backlash from all the abusive-FA horror stories we’ve heard? “Fuck ’em; I’m getting my licks in first. They’re gonna have me “detained” by some TSA goon anyway; I’ll give ’em a reason to do it.” Now, I’m no Sigmund Freud, but the more I ponder that scenario, the more traction it gains…
-R
(pop sociologist?)