Bajar
Intern
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2014
- Posts
- 56
- Qantas
- Bronze
- Virgin
- Gold
Took four VA flights this week and was amazed at how loose the definition of “willing and able to assist” was when it came to emergency exit row seating in 13 & 14.
Flight one, an elderly lady who needed assistance for boarding was placed in 13F, next to the window. The old dear needed her walker to get to the gate, and was wheeled in a chair to a lift because she couldn’t do the stairs.
Flight two, I was seated next to a kid no older than 10 in 14A, with his Mum in 14B.
Flight three, two retirees, the gentleman needed assistance getting up the stairs and a walking stick up and down the aisle. His partner needed help raising her handbag up to the overhead locker.
I know folk pay extra to sit there (and I paid to sit there myself in the aisle), but clearly the question being asked “are you willing and able to assist in the event of an emergency” seems to be a box ticking exercise.
If an emergency occurred on any of those flights, I don’t think we could have relied on any of the folk I was seated next to.
Anyone else experience this with VA recently?
Flight one, an elderly lady who needed assistance for boarding was placed in 13F, next to the window. The old dear needed her walker to get to the gate, and was wheeled in a chair to a lift because she couldn’t do the stairs.
Flight two, I was seated next to a kid no older than 10 in 14A, with his Mum in 14B.
Flight three, two retirees, the gentleman needed assistance getting up the stairs and a walking stick up and down the aisle. His partner needed help raising her handbag up to the overhead locker.
I know folk pay extra to sit there (and I paid to sit there myself in the aisle), but clearly the question being asked “are you willing and able to assist in the event of an emergency” seems to be a box ticking exercise.
If an emergency occurred on any of those flights, I don’t think we could have relied on any of the folk I was seated next to.
Anyone else experience this with VA recently?