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|
Attributes | |
ACN | 1192693 |
Time | |
Date | 201407 |
Place | |
Locale Reference | ZZZ.Airport |
State Reference | US |
Aircraft 1 | |
Make Model Name | Commercial Fixed Wing |
Component | |
Aircraft Component | Waste Water Disposal System |
Person 1 | |
Function | Flight Attendant (On Duty) |
Qualification | Flight Attendant Current |
Events | |
Anomaly | Aircraft Equipment Problem Less Severe Deviation - Procedural Published Material / Policy Flight Deck / Cabin / Aircraft Event Other / Unknown |
Narrative:
While on the jet in denver we were stopped by the inbound crew and informed that waste was spilling from the aft lavatory onto the floor in front of the jumpseat and into the galley. The purser said the water appeared to come from the toilet and sink and was soiled. Upon boarding there was a foul odor and we waited for the cockpit. The pilot walked to the back of the plane and said the lav was locked; sealed and we were going. I pointed out that the seatbelt harness and safety equipment was soiled. The galley floor was soiled and the aisle by the passenger seat was soiled. The area in front of the jumpseat was soiled. Insufficient measures were taken to decontaminate the harness; galley and demo equipment; the wet floor in the galley and in front of the jumpseat and passenger area. During landing fluid spilled from the lav toward the jumpseat and I had to keep my feet on the lav wall to keep waste off of them. Regardless of my concerns there was a breakdown in crew resource mgt. There was no support or effort to address my concerns. Carpets in the passenger area; galley area; seatbelt harness; jumpseat area; demo equipment were all soiled. I notified inflight. I want to know what is the proper procedure to deal with contaminants and why didn't flight ops coordinate better to address the waste in an effort to clean and disinfect the aircraft? Why wasn't the procedure followed? I am highly concerned about the possibility of infectious waste given we are a global carrier and I was exposed unlike the crew at the front of the aircraft.
Original NASA ASRS Text
Title: Air Carrier Flight Attendant believes that a lavatory spill on an aircraft she was assigned to was not properly cleaned and disinfected prior to departure.
Narrative: While on the jet in Denver we were stopped by the inbound crew and informed that waste was spilling from the aft lavatory onto the floor in front of the jumpseat and into the galley. The purser said the water appeared to come from the toilet and sink and was soiled. Upon boarding there was a foul odor and we waited for the cockpit. The pilot walked to the back of the plane and said the Lav was locked; sealed and we were going. I pointed out that the seatbelt harness and safety equipment was soiled. The galley floor was soiled and the aisle by the passenger seat was soiled. The area in front of the jumpseat was soiled. Insufficient measures were taken to decontaminate the harness; galley and demo equipment; the wet floor in the galley and in front of the jumpseat and passenger area. During landing fluid spilled from the Lav toward the jumpseat and I had to keep my feet on the Lav wall to keep waste off of them. Regardless of my concerns there was a breakdown in crew resource mgt. There was no support or effort to address my concerns. Carpets in the passenger area; galley area; seatbelt harness; jumpseat area; demo equipment were all soiled. I notified inflight. I want to know what is the proper procedure to deal with contaminants and why didn't flight ops coordinate better to address the waste in an effort to clean and disinfect the aircraft? Why wasn't the procedure followed? I am highly concerned about the possibility of infectious waste given we are a global carrier and I was exposed unlike the crew at the front of the aircraft.
Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.