Sometimes you’ll see flight delays because passengers have to be removed from the aircraft, though it’s not every day that you see a delay because crew members had to be removed.

A new crew was then found, and the flight finally departed at 3:24PM, just under four hours behind schedule, and arrived at 5:09PM, a little over four hours behind schedule.

Ordinarily, United’s flight status page provides detailed explanations sharing the reasons for delays, though that’s not available here… perhaps unsurprisingly.

Flight status for the delayed United flight

These kinds of incidents are very rare, but do happen

As you’d expect, flight attendants work with all kinds of different people, so they’re used to having to get along with others. After all, they rarely work with the same person twice, and the industry attracts all kinds of characters.

As a result, it’s extremely rare to see a disagreement between crew members get so bad that they have to delay a flight and find a completely new crew. One certainly wonders what kind of a disagreement caused this incident.

In these kinds of situations, often it comes down to different approaches to customer service between flight attendants. Maybe one flight attendant is treating a passenger poorly, and the other flight attendant refuses to go along with that (since flight attendants often have one another’s backs, even when they maybe shouldn’t).

This isn’t even limited to flight attendants, as you’ll also see this with pilots sometimes. A July 2022 incident comes to mind, where two Alaska pilots on a flight from Washington (IAD) to San Francisco (SFO) couldn’t get along. One of the pilots even explained the situation to passengers, stating the delay was “due to a failure to get along,” and that he was leaving the plane “in the interest of safety.”

So yeah, ideally everyone would be able to get along, and incidents like this shouldn’t happen. At the same time, if there truly is a situation where two people just can’t work together, I appreciate when that’s addressed before takeoff, so it doesn’t pose a safety risk inflight.

Bottom line

A United Airlines flight from Des Moines to Chicago was delayed by hours, after two flight attendants reportedly couldn’t get along, to the point that their supervisor had to get involved, and a new crew had to be found. As a result, the flight was delayed by around four hours.

A great solo travel tip spotted this week on One Mile at a Time.

Share.

Your source for the travel news. This is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a travel site.

Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version