A steward or stewardess's primary tasks are to:
- Serve passengers and generally ensure that passengers have a good experience onboard.
- On transatlantic routes and certain domestic routes, food and drink are served, and duty-free is sold onboard the Atlantic routes.
- Take care of safety and to oversee passenger well-being and comfort onboard our aircraft and helicopters.
The hometowns for flight attendants are currently Nuuk, Narsarsuaq, Ilulissat, and Copenhagen.
About the training programme
After 6 weeks of training in Copenhagen, you are under the supervision of an instructor for 4 weeks. You will then be checked out as a Cabin Attendant.
Important areas of the training are:
- Service
- Emergency procedures
- First aid
- Fire extinguishing
You earn no wages during training, but there is payment of a subsistence allowance and accommodation is paid by Air Greenland when a special agreement is made with each individual.
Your qualifications
You must have a good sense of humor, a twinkle in your eye, lots of energy, as well as flexibility.
Preferably experience in the service industry - guide, nurse, nursing assistant, social and healthcare assistant.
You speak Greenlandic and/or Danish fluently, and also preferably able to understand the other Scandinavian languages.
In addition, you must speak, understand and read English. You must also like to work at any time of day.
Other requirements:
- Normal vision, general good health, both physical and mental
- The ability to produce clean CRB check
- Be 18-years-old at time of application
- Be able to swim or willing to learn to swim
About Air Greenland:
Air Greenland A/S, also known as Greenlandair, is the flag carrier airline of Greenland, jointly owned by the SAS Group (37.5%), the Greenlandic Government and the Danish Government. It operates a fleet of 32 aircraft, including 1 airliner used for transatlantic and charter flights, 9 fixed-wing aircraft primarily serving the domestic network, and 22 helicopters feeding passengers from the smaller communities into the domestic airport network. Flights to heliports in the remote settlements are operated on contract with the government of Greenland.
Besides running scheduled services and government-contracted flights to most villages in the country, the airline also supports remote research stations, provides charter services for tourists and Greenland's energy and mineral-resource industries and permits medivac during emergencies. Air Greenland has seven subsidiaries, an airline, hotels, tour operators, a travel agency specialized in Greenlandic tourism and the Arctic Umiaq Line, an unprofitable but government-subsidized ferry service.
Founded in 1960 as Grønlandsfly, the airline started its first services with Catalina water planes and within the decade expanded to include DHC-3 Otters as well as Sikorsky S-61 helicopters, some of which remain in active service. The majority of operations were based on helicopters until the newly established Greenland Home Rule began investing in a network of short takeoff and landing airfields. These were very expensive to construct and Greenland's airport fees are still among the highest in the world;[2] they also required a new fleet: DHC-7 turboprops uniquely suited to the harsh terrain and weather conditions in Greenland. The reliability of connections improved as the domestic airport network expanded in the 1990s: increasing use of the Dash 7s made the airline less restricted by inclement weather. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Air Greenland acquired a Boeing 757 and an Airbus A330, allowing it to open connections to Copenhagen until then operated by SAS which also competed mid to late 2000s. In the 21st century, it competes with Air Iceland for international connections and small charter services domestically.
source: Wikipedia
If you wish to apply please follow this link:
http://www.latestpilotjobs.com/jobs/view/id/1025.html
Good luck!
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