The change will offer employees 'more choice on how they want to express themselves at work,' the company said.
Virgin Atlantic is relaxing its strict dress code for female flight attendants, and will now allow them to wear pants and forgo makeup, the company announced Wednesday.
In a statement from the company, Executive Vice President of Customer Mark Anderson said the new changes"offer an increased level of comfort" and"also provide our team with more choice on how they want to express themselves at work." Flight attendants will no longer be required to wear makeup, but are still"welcome to wear any of our existing palette of make-up."
Deutschland Neuesten Nachrichten, Deutschland Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
Virgin Atlantic tells female cabin crew they can ditch makeup on flightsFemale cabin crew on Virgin Atlantic will no longer be required to wear makeup during flights, the airline has said.
Weiterlesen »
Virgin Atlantic drops mandatory make-up rule for cabin crewVirgin Atlantic female cabin crew are to be allowed to work without wearing make...
Weiterlesen »
Virgin Atlantic drops mandatory makeup rule for female flight attendantsThe airline Virgin Atlantic has dropped its requirement for female cabin crew to wear makeup on flights. Women will also be offered trousers as part of their uniform automatically, rather than only on request.
Weiterlesen »
Passengers, crew on Virgin Atlantic flight quarantined in U.K.One passenger tweeted that the passengers had all been on a cruise ship in the Caribbean and that it is believed the illness originated on the ship and not on the plane.
Weiterlesen »
Virgin Atlantic's female flight attendants no longer have to wear makeup to workVirgin Atlantic's female flight attendants no longer have to wear makeup to work via CNBCMakeIt
Weiterlesen »
Four people charged in scheme to bilk federal disaster funds in the US Virgin IslandsProsecutors unsealed the indictment of four people charged with a scheme to defraud the U.S. federal disaster relief program assisting in the U.S. Virgin Islands after hurricanes.
Weiterlesen »