findingnema wrote:flyjay123 wrote:eta unknown wrote:The same reason NZ used to have one: LON hotel costs, arguably the most costly and difficult to negotiate in the world. The crew per diem expenses are also high for LON.
BA has a few India crew bases, they have to hotel those crews in Lon..... so how does your logic work here compared to cheaper hotels in India UK based crews?
BA usually only have 2/3 International/Overseas Cabin Crew on any flight to/from London, whilst CX/QF flights were partially or completely crewed from London.
Often airlines can find it difficult to affordably source accommodation in London that meets the union’s and company’s minimum standards. Sometimes foreign crew bases, like with BA, are established as it’s cheaper for the airline to pay allowances in their home base rather than the destination, or there may be language/cultural benefits.
At BA, we primarily have overseas crew bases at destinations where language and cultural differences mean employing locally based crews increases level of service offered. The knowledge of these crews is highly regarded by LHR crews and they play an invaluable part in the team onboard. As a rule of thumb there are generally 2-3 overseas crew on flights.
There are currently bases in MEX, BAH, CAI, HND, PVG, PEK DEL, BOM and MAA and they operate flights into LHR (LGW do not have services with overseas crew). There used to be bases in more destinations in South America and Asia, but these have sadly closed over the years.
MEX crews fly solely from their home bases to LHR, same for CAI and HND. Crews based in BAH operate BAH, as well as Saudi services so may do a trip like BAH-LHR-RUH-LHR-BAH. India crews operate from their home bases, a new base in HYD was announced pre-pandemic to better serve the cultural differences of the region, though this new base is currently on hold.
The Indian bases are the only ones with a slightly different uniform for female crews.
International or Overseas cabin crew as they are referred too, are on a variety of contracts, they are not union busters and work to mutually agreed roster agreements. The bases have team leaders or senior crew members (though none are SCCM qualified and are never in charge of the cabin). Many of the ICC/OCC crew have been with us for a very long time and are genuinely a fantastic bunch of people.
Currently the Chinese and Japanese bases are not flying due no commercial services to those destinations.
It is worth noting they operate to UK FTLs and carry out all safety training in our training facility at LHR.