logo
US flight attendants are fed up like their Air Canada peers. Here's why they aren't likely to strike

US flight attendants are fed up like their Air Canada peers. Here's why they aren't likely to strike

Independent3 hours ago
At the end of work trips, Nathan Miller goes home to a makeshift bedroom in his parents' house in Virginia. The 29-year-old flight attendant is part of a PSA Airlines crew based in Philadelphia, but Miller says he can't afford to live there.
He makes about $24,000 a year working full-time for the American Airlines subsidiary. Despite often staffing multiple flights a day, Miller commutes by plane between Virginia Beach and Philadelphia International Airport, a distance of about 215 miles.
'I've considered finding a whole new job. It's not something that I want to do," Miller, who joined PSA two years ago, said. "But it's not sustainable.'
His situation isn't unique. Frustrations among flight attendants at both regional and legacy airlines have been building for years over paychecks that many of them say don't match the weight of what their jobs demand. Compounding the discontent over hourly wages is a long-standing airline practice of not paying attendants for the work they perform on the ground, like getting passengers on and off planes.
Air Canada 's flight attendants put a public spotlight on these simmering issues when about 10,000 of them walked off the job last weekend, forcing the airline to cancel more than 3,000 flights. The strike ended Tuesday with a tentative deal that includes wage increases and, for the first time, pay for boarding passengers.
In the United States, however, the nearly century-old Railway Labor Act makes it far more difficult for union flight attendants like Miller, a member of the Association of Flight Attendants, to strike than most other American workers. Unlike the Boeing factory workers and Hollywood writers and actors who collectively stopped work in recent years, U.S. airline workers can only strike if federal mediators declare an impasse — and even then, the president or Congress can intervene.
For that reason, airline strikes are exceedingly rare. The last major one in the U.S. was over a decade ago by Spirit Airlines pilots, and most attempts since then have failed. American Airlines flight attendants tried in 2023 but were blocked by mediators.
Without the ultimate bargaining chip, airline labor unions have seen their power eroded in contract talks that now stretch far beyond historical norms, according to Sara Nelson, the international president of the AFA. Negotiations that once took between a year and 18 months now drag on for three years, sometimes more.
'The right to strike is fundamental to collective bargaining, but it has been chipped away," Nelson said. Her union represents 50,000 attendants, including the ones at United Airlines, Alaska Airlines and PSA Airlines.
On Monday, she joined PSA flight attendants in protest outside Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, near where an airliner operated by PSA crashed into the Potomac River in January after colliding with an Army helicopter. All 67 people on the two aircraft were killed, including the plane's pilot, co-pilot and two flight attendants.
The airline's flight attendants also demonstrated outside three other U.S. airports. In a statement, PSA called the demonstrations "one of the important ways flight attendants express their desire to get a deal done — and we share the same goal.'
Flight attendants say their jobs have become more demanding in recent years. Planes are fuller, and faster turnaround times between flights are expected. Customers may see them mostly as uniforms that serve food and beverages, but the many hats attendants juggle include handling in-flight emergencies, deescalating conflicts and managing unruly passengers.
'We have to know how to put out a lithium battery fire while at 30,000 feet, or perform CPR on a passenger who's had a heart attack. We're trained to evacuate a plane in 90 seconds, and we're always the last ones off,' said Becky Black, a PSA flight attendant in Dayton, Ohio, who is part of the union's negotiating team.
And yet, Black says, their pay hasn't kept pace.
PSA flight attendants have been bargaining for over two years for better wages and boarding pay. Alaska flight attendants spent just as long in talks before reaching a deal in February. At American, flight attendants began negotiations on a new contract in 2020 but didn't get one until 2024.
Southwest Airlines attendants pushed even longer — over five years — before winning a new deal last year that delivered an immediate 22% wage hike and annual 3% increases through 2027.
'It was a great relief,' Alison Head, a longtime Southwest flight attendant based in Atlanta, said. 'Coming out of COVID, where you saw prices were high and individuals struggling, it really meant something.'
The contract didn't include boarding pay but secured the industry's first paid maternity and parental leave, a historic win for the largely female workforce. A mother of two, Head said she returned to work 'fairly quickly' after having her first child because she couldn't afford to stay home.
'Now, new parents don't have to make that same hard decision,' she said.
Many of her peers at other airlines are still waiting for their new contracts.
At United, attendants rejected a tentative agreement last month, with 71% voting no. The union is now surveying its members to understand why and plans to return to the bargaining table in December.
One major sticking point: boarding pay. While Delta became the first U.S. airline to offer it in 2022 — followed by American and Alaska — many flight attendants still aren't compensated during what they call the busiest part of their shift.
Back in Virginia Beach, Miller is still trying to make it work. On family vacations during his childhood, Miller said he was fascinated by flight attendants and their ability to make people feel comfortable and safe.
Now he's got his dream job, but he isn't sure he can afford to keep doing it.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Treasury Secretary quashes hopes that Americans will get rebate checks from tariffs
Treasury Secretary quashes hopes that Americans will get rebate checks from tariffs

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Treasury Secretary quashes hopes that Americans will get rebate checks from tariffs

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent just gave Americans a reason to doubt whether they'll ever see the 'rebates' that some MAGAworld figures have called for as funds roll in from Trump's tariff plans. Bessent was on CNBC's 'Squawk Box' explaining that the projected total of $300 billion in tariff revenue (the administration's own figure) would be first applied to driving down America's national debt. 'We're going to bring down the deficit-to-GDP [ratio]. We'll start paying down the debt, and then at that point that can be used as an offset to the American people,' Bessent told CNBC Tuesday. He added that 'I think, at a point, we're going to be able to do it,' but stressed that for now, ' President [Donald] Trump and I are laser-focused on paying down the debt.' His comments come as new reports show that the U.S. has taken in $100 billion in tariff revenue since April, the onset of Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs. That figure is expected to rise at an accelerated rate for the remainder of the year after enforcement of Trump's 'reciprocal' tariffs began in early August. Bessent's comments betray one uncomfortable fact for both the Trump administration and House Republicans, however. The deficit-to-GDP ratio remains higher than 6 percent after 2024 and is likely to rise in the coming months, not fall. Real GDP growth is expected to be negatively affected by the president's tariff agenda, while the Republican budget reconciliation package that extended the 2017 tax cuts and poured billions into ICE enforcement measures was not deficit-neutral and is projected to add $3.4 trillion to the federal budget deficit over the next decade. All of that is to say: the president may end up having to choose between offsetting his own policy platform's effects on the national debt or a politically expedient move to cut Americans a check. The president pursued that latter option once before, during the Covid-19 pandemic, with the help of Democrats in Congress; it didn't help his re-election prospects that year. Bessent and others in the Trump administration are hoping that tariff revenues will continue to rise, and the Trump team has generally dismissed fears from economists around the effects tariffs will have on economic growth. Those fears are a central part of the dispute between the president and his Federal Reserve chief, Jerome Powell. For months, Trump has heaped political pressure and scorn on Powell over the Fed chair's refusal to lower interest rates — something the president sees as the main impediment to GDP growth. Powell, meanwhile, has cited concerns about persistent inflation in his repeated decisions to hold rates steady. The feud stems from a larger dynamic playing out within the Trump administration: the president's persistent fury in response to federal officials, almost exclusively career officials with nonpartisan backgrounds, refusing to play along with the White House's rose-colored view of the U.S. economy under Trump, including the effects of inflation, unemployment and wage growth. Powell has taken abuse from the president for months, and earlier in August Trump went a step further and fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics after a jobs report that generated unsatisfactory headlines. Trump accused the agency of juicing the numbers to help Democrats in the 2024 election. This week Trump escalated his feud with the Fed and called for the first Black member of the Fed's board of governors to resign. The president accused the woman, Lisa Cook, of mortgage fraud and demanded that the Justice Department investigate her after one of his political appointees at another agency made accusations that she 'falsified bank records.' Cook replied that the accusations were 'based on a mortgage application from four years ago, before I joined the Federal Reserve' and that she had 'no intention of being bullied to step down from my position because of some questions raised in a tweet.' 'I do intend to take any questions about my financial history seriously as a member of the Federal Reserve and so I am gathering the accurate information to answer any legitimate questions and provide the facts,' she added.

Why are people smuggling ants into the US?
Why are people smuggling ants into the US?

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Why are people smuggling ants into the US?

The smuggling of ants and other insects in the US is reportedly on the rise following recent cuts to the USDA. These cuts, implemented by the Department of Government Efficiency, led to layoffs and buyouts within the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, which regulates invertebrate smuggling. Industry sources suggest that these reductions have emboldened ant smugglers, while the process for legal ant sales has become more difficult, contributing to an increase in illicit trade. Invasive ant species, such as tawny crazy ants and Asian needle ants, pose significant environmental and public health risks, damaging ecosystems, homes, and causing severe stings. Experts express concern over the reduced infrastructure for detecting and preventing invasive species, although the USDA maintains that its enforcement capabilities have not diminished.

Jackson Hole jitters, Walmart drive Wall Street lower
Jackson Hole jitters, Walmart drive Wall Street lower

Reuters

time3 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Jackson Hole jitters, Walmart drive Wall Street lower

Aug 21 (Reuters) - Wall Street's main indexes fell on Thursday as investors awaited monetary policy clues from the Federal Reserve's annual economic symposium, while big-box retailer Walmart's quarterly results dampened sentiment. All eyes are now on the Jackson Hole, Wyoming, symposium where Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak on Friday at 10 a.m. ET. Traders will closely monitor Powell's speech for any clues on interest rate cuts in September following recent job market weakness. "Jitters over what's going to transpire tomorrow at Jackson Hole is certainly weighing on risk appetite a little bit with chair Powell's speech," said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist for LPL Financial. "There could be a decent selloff if we get a more hawkish than expected event." Traders have pared down bets on a 25-basis-point interest rate cut in September to 79% from 99.9% last week, according to data compiled by LSEG. Multiple policymakers, including Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, Atlanta President Raphael Bostic and Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid, have struck a cautious tone and acknowledged the need to stay data-dependent. A labor market report on Thursday showed signs of a slowdown, while a private report indicated business activity picked up pace in August, reflecting a complex environment for the U.S. central bank, which will deliberate on interest rates next month. At 2:00 p.m. the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI), opens new tab fell 155.46 points, or 0.34%, to 44,782.85, the S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab lost 22.16 points, or 0.35%, to 6,373.63 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), opens new tab lost 74.59 points, or 0.35%, to 21,098.27. Eight of the 11 S&P 500 sectors were down, led by consumer staples, which declined 1.4% after Walmart (WMT.N), opens new tab raised its fiscal year sales and profit, driven by strong demand from shoppers across all income levels, but missed quarterly profit estimates and flagged higher costs from tariffs. Shares of the retailer tumbled 4.8%. The spotlight was on reports from retailers, including Target (TGT.N), opens new tab and Home Depot (HD.N), opens new tab, this week as investors gauged the impact of U.S. tariffs on consumer spending. "There's a bit of a mixed picture within the consumer space and there's uncertainty in the economy - whether that's the job market or whether that's prices (increasing) from a tariff pass through," said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management. A technology stocks selloff earlier this week appeared to lose some steam, but Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab, Meta (META.O), opens new tab, (AMZN.O), opens new tab and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O), opens new tab remained weaker. The selloff signaled investor fears that tech stocks, which have soared from April lows, are overvalued, while Washington's growing interference in the sector has also raised alarms. Among other market movers, Coty (COTY.N), opens new tab slumped 22.3% after the beauty products maker forecast lower current-quarter sales on weak U.S. spending. In trade developments, the U.S. and the European Union on Thursday finalized a framework deal they reached last month, with no impact on stocks. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.62-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 97 new highs and 36 new lows on the NYSE. The S&P 500 posted six new 52-week highs and no new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 54 new highs and 95 new lows.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store