Airport workers program stresses how to de-stress

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DAVID PORTER | November 19, 2008 05:13 PM EST | AP

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Tom Murphy, center, talks with Emma Nikoi, left, and Etta James, right, both airport employees, as they role play during a workshop at Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, N.J., Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2008. In the workshop called, "Resiliency Edge," Murphy teaches techniques to airport workers for dealing with stressed-out holiday travelers.(AP Photo/Mike Derer)

NEWARK, N.J. — An irate traveler once raised his hand threateningly at Kaisy Belfon when told a flight was overbooked. Another petulant passenger tossed a piece of luggage at her.

Such stressful moments can happen anytime at an airport, but they're never more likely than when people are trying to get home for the holidays. So Belfon and hundreds of other workers at Newark Liberty Airport are getting a crash course in keeping their cool.

"Pressure causes people to do a lot of things," said Belfon, a 27-year-old customer service representative for US Airways. "Afterward they can't believe they acted that way, but under pressure they just tend to react, and then later they say they're sorry."

Stress may be higher than usual at airports this Thanksgiving, with 24 million passengers expected in the air and many airlines cutting back on numbers of flights due to the weak economy. To help employees cope, Newark Liberty is offering a customer service program with roots in the aftermath of 9/11.

"Resiliency Edge" was developed by Tom Murphy, a longtime aviation trainer and head of the Human Resiliency Institute in Fordham University's Graduate School of Education. About two dozen people got a first look at his presentation Wednesday on the concourse inside Terminal B as travelers hurried past to their gates.

"Understand where they're coming from, so you can put yourself in their place," Murphy told the group. "Understand that they're basically not bad people."

About 500 employees at Newark are scheduled to undergo the 90-minute training program, which received high marks when it was introduced at New York's JFK Airport in May.

Murphy is the author of "Reclaiming the Sky," a book recounting the stories of aviation workers who returned to work in the weeks and months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. His program borrows from the book's themes and cites four traits of effective airline customer service workers: adaptability, optimism, engagement and proactivity.

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Sounds easy in theory, but imagine doing it with a line of 20 people seething over missed connections and misplaced luggage.

In a role-play sequence, one employee played a man who needed to make a connection in Chicago to meet his family, whom he hadn't seen in six weeks, while another played a ticket agent whose shift was nearing an end and who had an after-hours appointment to get to.

The conversation was played two ways, first with the agent putting her needs before the customer and shunting him off to another agent _ causing him to get even more angry _ and the second with her calmly offering him a list of options to consider.

Murphy illustrated the contrast with a drawing of an empty box between the customer and the employee, symbolizing the choice of whose point of view the interaction will reflect.

"Get the need met," he said. "The minute the customer feels that you're putting them in the box, they begin to calm down."

Abusive behavior isn't confined to the terminal or to peak travel times, said Emma Nikoi, who works as a cashier for Five Star Parking on the airport grounds.

"People don't read the signs, and then you tell them the fee and they yell at you and call you names you wouldn't want to print," she said. "You have to stay calm, but you're also human."

NEWARK, N.J. — An irate traveler once raised his hand threateningly at Kaisy Belfon when told a flight was overbooked. Another petulant passenger tossed a piece of luggage at her. Such stressfu...
NEWARK, N.J. — An irate traveler once raised his hand threateningly at Kaisy Belfon when told a flight was overbooked. Another petulant passenger tossed a piece of luggage at her. Such stressfu...
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- madtom I'm a Fan of madtom 40 fans permalink
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The wrong kind of people are hired by TSA, people who largely come from an oppositional, underclass culture that is hostile to civil, middle-class America.

They get to treat law-abiding travelers just like criminals are treated in a jail -- and then go back to their lives feeling EMPOWERED. Their role model is jailers.

Puts a swagger in their step, yes indeed!

They are effectively empowered by the govt to be rude and inappropriate.

They are NOT being trained NOT to enjoy their work inappropriately.

It shows in their smirks, rudeness, arrogance.

Oh, and they'll steal rings or watches!

One does not encounter this demeanor among airport security personnel in other countries. Airport security in Britain, France, Spain, and Mexico, anyway, is utterly courteous and professional.

Why can't America be like that?

We need to take a hard, critical look at the way TSA comports itself toward the public.

America already has the surliest customs and immigration officials in the world.

TSA has far less to do with our safety than with fear-mongering political theater by the Bush Administration.

Judging from the results they achieve, it appears that TSA's purpose is to harass, confuse and intimidate law-abiding middle-class travelers at the airport -- with thuggy, rollicking govt employees who are having a VERY good time being Bad Cops.

It is deliberate, politically inspired, psychological manipulation of the traveling public by the Bushie thugs who run TSA.

Not unlike the Nuremburg Rallies, eh, Karl?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 11/28/2008

Here's the solution to holiday travel woes -- and, in fact, to all airline travel woes:

Take one small carry-on and no other luggage. Then when the airlines sends you to another plane because of "mechanical difficulties" or overbooking or the general awfulness of deregulated airline travel, you and your luggage will actually make the switch and get to the gate with time to spare. (C'mon -- how many different outfits do you need? These are relatives. They already know you're a slob. Who are you fooling?")

And anyway, if you get bumped isn't that the perfect excuse to take the free vouchers, stay at home for Thanksgiving, and go to the beach at a later date instead?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 11/26/2008
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Picture the obnoxious customers all together on a plane going down in flames.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 11/24/2008
- hip dibler I'm a Fan of hip dibler 10 fans permalink

blah, blah, blah, long answer.

don't take it personally, short answer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 AM on 11/20/2008
- AZBunny I'm a Fan of AZBunny 4 fans permalink

One thing I've found working in customer service is American's can NOT stand to be told they can't do EVERYTHING/ANYTHING that they want to. They seem to have this idea that because they ARE American's that guarantees them the right to have everything THIER way. They don't care what policy is, or why. They only want to do what they want.

I just got out of travel industry because their was WAY too much bad behavior that I could not deal with at all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 11/20/2008
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