Comments
  • Will M October 26, 2010 at 2:36 pm

    Aren't you forgetting that Mr. Slater was injured on the job, and his injury result of policies and workplace procedures prescribed by his employer. In addition to a straightforward worker's compensation claim, Mr. Slater has an excellent lawsuit against his employer.

    Consider that he received his injury while protecting the law-abiding passengers on the airplane from a customer who was unquestionably dissobeying a direct safety order to remain seated which directly endangered the surrounding passengers and ultimately endangered all of the passengers on the airplane.

    Mr. Slater received an injury while respoinding to a dangerous situation initiated by the blatent dissregard of a passenger for his safety and the safety of everyone else on the plane. He stabilized the situation and remained at his post until the airplane was stationary and at its final destination.

    As for his parting explative, it has long been held that a safety officer may match the verbal intensidy of the person they are charged to subdue. He was using the same verbal intensity as the passenger had used against him.

    You cannot find a recent frequent flier who has not seen someone who has been hit by something falling from an overstuffed overhead compartment or has themselves been hit. I personally witnessed a passenger break the door on an overhead compartment while trying to insert an obviously too-large bag. The bag then fell onto the shoulder of an elderly woman. The airlines are willing to allow this situation to occur so that they can collect a few more baggage fees.

    Did the airline detain, fine, or press charges against the unsafe passenger?

    JetBlue should consider itself lucky if it only has to pay $10k to roll up a slide. What if Mr. Slater had been killed, dissabled, paralized?

    You need to add a "d" Mr. Slater sues JetBlue, wins a monumental settlement, airlines all over the US rethink their carry on policies, domestic flight becomes safer and more enjoyable for all of us

    • admin October 28, 2010 at 2:53 am

      Hi Will, Interesting point–and I do like to look at things from all angles. So, here's another: Slater admits to being out the night before the incident and being a bit "worse for the wear" claiming it was a "rough night". We've all certainly had one of those, but the point is, you're being paid to be on your game the following day at work. So you're in control of the variables that may affect just how on your game you are–particularly when it comes to being out carousing the previous night. Secondly, the reports of Slater's injury appear to be conflicting. Hey, I completely agree there are a lot of a–holes riding planes these days who don't have an once of civility or propriety or decency or just plain ol' good manners–and a flight attendant should not be on the receiving end of some idiot's baggage crashing down on him and causing undue harm, nor their barrage of insults. But why the conflicting reports? When did the injury really happen? Who knows. And, one woman reported seeing the "gash" with blood dripping on Slater's forehead and she stated that she recalled saying that 'he should really put a band-aid on that'–I may be paraphrasing, but that was the gist of her comment. Ok, so let's take this to another level–and I do not want to be alarmist here–but it's been reported that Slater is HIV-positive. What's your comfort level with the potential for coming into direct contact with HIV-positive blood? Now, I know damn well you can't suddenly get HIV by touching an infected person's blood–but given the right circumstances, who knows. And I'm not here to debate the medical science of HIV transmission. What I'm pointing out is responsibility. You're reportedly standing there with an open wound, you're HIV-positive, and gee, as passengers are boarding you just let it ride for a while? In my estimation, Slater–who understandably may have hit his last nerve given the perfect storm of circumstances–has a few holes in his story or at least some cause for seeing things from JetBlue's perspective.

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