84°F
weather icon Clear

LETTER: A word in defense of U.S. corporations

Updated March 24, 2020 - 9:07 pm

In response to Michael A. Donnelly’s March 18 letter complaining about big companies and bailouts:

Who are these airline “fat cats”? The workers who clean the cabin of trash, vomit, etc. after each flight? The ground personnel who guide aircraft in and out of gates and load and unload luggage in all weather? Those who clean the lavatories, fuel the aircraft and de-ice it in severe weather? The gate and ticket agents (diplomatic skills required)?

Are they the skilled mechanics who are responsible for regular and emergency maintenance? The flight attendants whose required skills include CPR and other first-responder skills along with handling emergencies such as illness, injury triage, delivering babies and passenger safety procedures in emergencies? The pilots who undergo ongoing training and are held totally responsible for passenger and aircraft safety at all times in all weather and under all circumstances?

Airlines are for-profit businesses vulnerable to Mother Nature’s whims and fluctuating fuel costs. As such, these “fat cats” are subject to job loss when life isn’t so perfect — i.e. coronavirus — as opposed to tax-funded government employees.

So, Mr. Donnelly, to keep you safely flying from point A to point B and needing to make money in order to do so, the airlines may ask you to pay for your liquor, second checked bag and tighter seating. I, for one, am willing to lend a hand to these “fat cats” and their families.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: Staffing bill aims at the wrong target

Critically needed temps help Nevada industries.

LETTER: All burned up

There might be another reason Georgia burns less than California.

LETTER: Lawyer joke

Attorney sues Las Vegas Valley Water District over conservation efforts.

LETTER: The transportation bureaucracy

The U.S. Department of Transportation grant to study the alternatives to improving public transit on Charleston means we will spend $5.9 million of before Charleston ever sees an orange cone. Wow.

LETTER: The dangers in school zones

I’ve lived in Southern Nevada since 1996, and school zones are invisible to many drivers. It seems that the casual attitude of local officials hasn’t helped much.

LETTER: Make Las Vegas fun again

The issue is that the Las Vegas casinos are no longer fun. It certainly is time for another reinvention.

MORE STORIES