Entertainment

Thomas Cook passengers give staff carrier bags of cash after flight home

When the plane landed, just before 8am on Monday, tearful staff discovered they had been made redundant, effective immediately.
When the plane landed, just before 8am on Monday, tearful staff discovered they had been made redundant, effective immediately. When the plane landed, just before 8am on Monday, tearful staff discovered they had been made redundant, effective immediately.

Passengers on one of the final Thomas Cook flights collected two carrier bags of cash for the cabin crew, after learning when they landed that staff would not be getting paid.

During boarding, the pilot told the 300 passengers they did not know what would happen to the company, but encouraged people to “pray for staff”.

Stephanie Kaye, 25, told the PA news agency that when the plane landed just before 8am on Monday, tearful staff discovered the company had collapsed while they had been in the air, and they had all been made redundant – effective immediately.

She said: “When we landed the pilot came on the Tannoy and said, ‘our dream has ended’ and told us the staff would probably not be getting paid for working that flight.

“Staff had remained so professional throughout the eight-hour flight, so the passengers did a whip round for them.

“People were being really generous, stuffing rolls of cash, and leftover dollars, into two carrier bags.

“I don’t know how much cash there was, but there were two very full carrier bags.”

Staff told the passengers how overwhelmed and grateful they were for the support.

Ms Kaye said: “It was a really emotional atmosphere, even passengers were crying as they got off the flight.”

Thomas Cook ceases trading
Thomas Cook ceases trading People carry boxes through the car park outside the Peterborough headquarters of Thomas Cook (Joe Giddens/PA)

Ms Kaye said: “Everyone just felt so lucky that we had been able to get home.”

Thomas Cook ceased trading in the early hours of Monday after failing to secure a last-ditch rescue deal.

An estimated 150,000 people are being brought back to the UK by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) in a flight programme costing £100 million.

About 9,000 staff in the UK face redundancy.