jimntx
Veteran
As far as retirement goes, there has been a slight uptick in the numbers but you will not see a huge change there. The reason is very complex and for the most part money isn't the primary reason that flight attendants chose to retire. I have spoke to several very senior flight attendants and there is a real attachment to the job....wheather it be the lifestyle or simply a social outlet. American Airlines is where their friends are and it is an all consuming way of life. Some don't want to be home 24/7 with their spouse and some don't have anyone at home to talk to. There is a wonderful male flight attendant at JFK who commutes from San Diego and he is 62. We talked about retirement and he has been able to amass nearly $800,000 into his 401k. This along with retirement and social security would lend him very well off. Yet he commutes across the country and flies Buenos Aires....and he loves it! I say all the power to him!
And, I do not have any problem with f/as who work as long as they want--as long as they fly their line and work when they are on the airplane. But, we all know examples of f/as who, if they even get on the airplane, think that their seniority allows them to do as little as possible, and the rest of us pick up the slack. Or, they just bid the best lines, sell them to a trip trader and never fly, period. What do they possibly get out of that?????
I'll be 66 next month. I get my 10 years and will be eligible for retiree travel benefits at the end of January next year. I may or may not retire then. If I am still in good health, AND I still enjoy the job as much as I do now, I will not retire right away. But, I intend to look at it on a month to month basis. If I start thinking in terms of dropping all my trips (or even dropping all but 35 hours) every month, then do me, you and the traveling public a favor. Get us a trip together on the S80 with me as #4. When we get to cruising altitude, open the aft galley door and shove me out.
