Airline Personnel
The various types of airline personnel include: Flight operations personnel including flight safety personnel.
- Flight crew, responsible for the operation of the aircraft. Flight crew members include:
- Pilots (Captain and First Officer: some older aircraft also required a Flight Engineer and or a Navigator)
- Flight attendants, (led by a purser on larger aircraft)
- in-flight security personnel on some airlines (most notably El Al)
- Groundcrew, responsible for operations at airports. Ground crew members include:
- Aerospace and avionics engineers responsible for certifying the aircraft for flight and management of aircraft maintenance
- Aerospace engineers, responsible for airframe, powerplant and electrical systems maintenance
- Avionics engineers responsible for avionics and instruments maintenance
- Airframe and powerplant technicians
- Electric System technicians, responsible for maintenance of electrical systems
- Avionics technicians, responsible for maintenance of avionics
- Flight dispatchers
- Baggage handlers
- Ramp Agents
- Remote centralised weight and balancing
- Gate agents
- Ticket agents
- Passenger service agents (such as airline lounge employees)
- Reservation agents, usually (but not always) at facilities outside the airport.
- Aerospace and avionics engineers responsible for certifying the aircraft for flight and management of aircraft maintenance
Airlines follow a corporate structure where each broad area of operations (such as maintenance, flight operations(including flight safety), and passenger service) is supervised by a vice president. Larger airlines often appoint vice presidents to oversee each of the airline's hubs as well. Airlines employ lawyers to deal with regulatory procedures and other administrative tasks.
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Famous quotes containing the words airline and/or personnel:
“My job as a reservationist was very routine, computerized ... I had no free will. I was just part of that stupid computer.”
—Beryl Simpson, U.S. employment counselor; former airline reservationist. As quoted in Working, book 2, by Studs Terkel (1973)
“This woman is headstrong, obstinate and dangerously self- opinionated.”
—Report by Personnel Officer at I.C.I., rejecting Mrs. Thatcher for a job in 1948.