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I was on an Air Canada flight Calgary to Vancouver recently; an E190, in first row of economy, row 4 aisle. About 3 mins out from touchdown, on final approach I look up and 2 rows in front of me, in business is a guy in an aisle seat, on the phone! No question about it, a live conversation. I could see that the FA could see, but he did nothing (such as make a PA), not even as the pax passed him by on exiting the plane.
I was walking up the air bridge and one of the pilots was walking beside me - apparently on a tight connection himself. So I asked him - In Canada, how do I complain about breaches of FAs instructions, such as using a mobile phone in flight? (He obviously didn't know about the particular incident I had in mind). His answer was candid, if nothing else - words to the effect of:
"No-one, really. Phones don't really matter, we only say it because it asserts some authority and people expect us to say it."
I'll add this to my growing list of flagrant breaches of FA 'safety' instructions which are in turn ignored by the FAs that I've observed flying in North America of late (such as laptops on laps during take-off, people getting up to go to the toilet when final seat belt sign comes on for landing etc.
I recall in the 'Ask the Pilot' thread that a senior pilot answered re phone use that it did matter at the margin; if it was a tricky landing then phones definitely needed to be off (this was when the rule was 'off' not flight mode); I hope I captured that correctly.
I was walking up the air bridge and one of the pilots was walking beside me - apparently on a tight connection himself. So I asked him - In Canada, how do I complain about breaches of FAs instructions, such as using a mobile phone in flight? (He obviously didn't know about the particular incident I had in mind). His answer was candid, if nothing else - words to the effect of:
"No-one, really. Phones don't really matter, we only say it because it asserts some authority and people expect us to say it."
I'll add this to my growing list of flagrant breaches of FA 'safety' instructions which are in turn ignored by the FAs that I've observed flying in North America of late (such as laptops on laps during take-off, people getting up to go to the toilet when final seat belt sign comes on for landing etc.
I recall in the 'Ask the Pilot' thread that a senior pilot answered re phone use that it did matter at the margin; if it was a tricky landing then phones definitely needed to be off (this was when the rule was 'off' not flight mode); I hope I captured that correctly.