- Two veteran United flight attendants are suing the airline for discriminating against employees based on their physical attributes by only staffing athletic team charter flights with young, blond crews, Bloomberg reported.
- The flight attendants, which Bloomberg identified as a Black woman and a Jewish woman who have both worked at United for more than 28 years, said they could not work on the charter flights because they were not on the "preferred" list.
- The complaint says young, white, blond flight attendants with less experience were able to work the flights in an example of the airline valuing employees based "entirely on their racial and physical attributes, and stereotypical notions of sexual allure," according to Bloomberg.
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The lawsuit was filed by two veteran flight attendants, a Black woman who has worked for United for 28 years and a Jewish woman who has been with the airline for 34 years, according to Bloomberg. In the suit, they say were repeatedly unable to work charter flights for teams in the National Football League, Major League Baseball, and National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Sharon Tesler and Kim Guillory said in the complaint that they were notified they were not able to work those shifts because they were not on the "preferred" lists, Bloomberg reported.
The complaint stated young, white, blond flight attendants with less experience were able to work the flights in an example of the airline valuing employees based "entirely on their racial and physical attributes, and stereotypical notions of sexual allure," according to Bloomberg.
United Airlines told Business Insider in a statement that "while we cannot comment on this ongoing litigation, the
Flight attendants have historically been the subject of rampant sexism in advertisements, flight attendant dress codes, and weight restrictions of employees, Business Insider previously reported. Fierce competition among airlines pushed companies to advertise attractive workers in tight outfits before attendants became a key group in championing the feminist movement in the late 1960s.
Before a federal court decision prompted airlines to change rules in 1970, flight attendants could be rejected for being married or pregnant. Eventually, the industry welcomed male employees and opted to stop calling the workers "stewardesses."