Female
Lufthansa pilots are taking off
•Six
crews consisting of only women will be setting off from the Lufthansa
Group hubs to Berlin for International Women's Day
•12
female pilots will fly passengers from Frankfurt, Munich, Düsseldorf,
Zurich, Vienna and Brussels to the German capital
On
8 March, on International Women's Day, six crews from Lufthansa,
SWISS, Austrian Airlines and Brussels consisting only of women will
make their morning flights from the Lufthansa Group hubs to Berlin.
The jets setting off from Frankfurt, Munich, Düsseldorf, Vienna,
Zurich and Brussels will each be flown by two female pilots.
"We
specifically look out for potential female employees on our
application channels and we provide an employee-friendly working
environment that means that family and work can be reconciled; this
allows us to attract more young women to supposedly typically male
professions such as the pilot's job", says Dr Bettina Volkens,
Chief Officer Corporate Human Resources and Legal Affairs at Deutsche
Lufthansa AG.
The
first two women began their scheduled service with Lufthansa in 1988.
The year 2010 saw a world premiere in the airfreight industry: a
Lufthansa Cargo aircraft took off with an all-female crew. These
days, women in the cockpit are no longer an exception. Around six
percent of pilots at the Lufthansa Group are female and the
percentage has been continuously increasing over the past years.
Around 80 percent of the cabin staff are female. Lufthansa received a
blessing from the Society for the German Language for the new German
word "Kapitänin" (female form of "Kapitän" =
captain) specifically to refer to the growing number of female
pilots.
Women
play a central role not just on the plane. Be it on the apron or in
the logistics centre, more and more women are opting for more
technical jobs at the Lufthansa Group – such as Christina
Schultheis. She has been a ground operations agent at Lufthansa since
2012, where she has been working in a 2-shift system since completing
her training as an aviation service expert. She has about two hours
to service a long-haul flight, which includes cleaning the cabin,
refuelling, loading freight and luggage and boarding the passengers.
Around one quarter of ground operation agents are women. "Here
you can make a difference: It is my responsibility that every flight
leaves safely, efficiently and on time", says Schultheis. "We
are the link between passengers, crew, tower, cleaning, catering and
cargo – we talk to everyone. I particularly like the diversity and
responsibility that comes with this job. I love doing it. I never
want to leave."
In
addition to the supposedly male domains, increasing the percentage of
women in management is another goal of the Lufthansa Group. "We
are well on our way to achieving this through the introduction of a
transparent job posting process and the use of recruitment diversity
criteria", says Volkens.
In
2011, Lufthansa and other major German companies set themselves
voluntary targets to increase the number of women in management. By
2020 the aim is to have 30 percent more women compared with 2010.
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