14/11/2023
Honours for Captain Deborah Lawrie AM
Sydney Airport has named a new flyover bridge after aviation trailblazer, Captain Deborah Lawrie AM. Lawrie was the first woman in Australia to become a pilot for a commercial airline, pre-1989 Ansett, after she took the airline to the High Court and won a ground-breaking legal battle. In 1979, she won Australia’s first successful High Court s*x discrimination case for employment, that paved the way for future generations of women to get equal rights in workplaces across Australia. Lawrie made history on 22 January 1980 when she co-piloted an Ansett flight from Alice Springs to Darwin and now, almost 44 years since that date ‘The Deborah Lawrie Flyover’ into Sydney’s domestic airport, has been named in her honour, recognising her service to aviation and advocacy for gender equality.
Lawrie was a member of AIPA in 2008 for some years when she was a Jetstar Captain on the A320/321 fleet and continues to fly, aged 70 now, for Virgin Australia. The bridge opened 12 November, and you can read more about that https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-11-06/sydney-airport-bridge-named-for-captain-deborah-lawrie/103068408
It took Qantas some years to follow suite, not hiring female pilots until 28 September 1984. On that significant day in Qantas’ history, Captain Ann Bennett (ret) and Captain Sharelle Quinn (ret) joined the airline as Pilots Under Initial Training (PUIT) on the B747 Classic and thus paved the way for other female pilots to begin their careers at Qantas and mentored many others along the way.
Now, almost 40 years later things look very different in the aviation space with Lawrie commenting, "We currently have a quite a unique situation where the CEOs of Virgin Australia, Qantas and Jetstar, the head of Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) and the Federal Transport Minister (Catherine King), are all female," she said. "So I think the future of women in our industry is in good hands."
Captain Deborah Lawrie was denied a job by Reginald Ansett for being a woman. Now her name will have pride of place on a bridge that goes over Reginald Ansett Drive, and the irony has not escaped her.