FAA to
discuss easing up on in-flight electronic
devices
A federal advisory panel will meet this week to come
up with recommendations for the use of electronic devices on airplanes during
take-offs and landings.
The Federal Aviation Administration committee,
which has been meeting since January, will gather behind closed doors tomorrow
and Wednesday to discuss whether or not restrictions should be eased, an FAA
spokesperson said.
The panel of industry and labor representatives had
been scheduled to make recommendations in July, but the FAA extended the
deadline to this month.
"The FAA recognizes consumers are intensely
interested in the use of personal electronics aboard aircraft," the FAA said in
a written statement. "That is why we tasked a government-industry group to
examine the safety issues and the feasibility of changing the current
restrictions. The group is meeting again this week and is expected to complete a
report to the FAA by the end of the month. We will wait for the group to finish
its work before we determine next steps."
FAA restrictions on electronics
go back decades, before smartphones and computer tablets became ubiquitous. They
were put in place because of concerns that devices could interfere with a
plane's communications systems.
But there's been no definitive proof that
the electronics tamper with a plane's systems. Currently, the use of electronic
devices is allowed above 10,000 feet.
Any FAA recommendation would not
apply to the use of cell phones on planes, which is prohibited by the Federal
Communications Commission.
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