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FAA warns of jail time, fines as
airports and airlines prep for unruly passengers ahead of the
inauguration
As
airlines and airports gird for more disruption when supporters of President
Donald Trump return to Washington for protests ahead of the inauguration, the
head of the Federal Aviation Administration issued a warning to air travelers:
Causing a safety risk could mean a jail term or a $35,000 fine.
“As a
former airline captain, I can attest from firsthand experience that the cabin
crew’s primary responsibility is to ensure the safety of all passengers,” FAA
Administrator Steve Dickson said in a statement. “I expect all passengers to
follow crew member instructions, which are in place for their safety and the
safety of flight.”
The
warning followed several viral videos, including those showing Sens. Mitt
Romney, R-Utah, and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., being heckled at airports last week,
and others showing rowdy supporters of Trump aboard airliners. A major flight
attendants union said every airline flying out of the Washington region had
experienced incidents in recent days.
The
chairman of the House Transportation Committee and the head of its aviation
subcommittee wrote Monday to Dickson asking him to take additional steps. The
lawmakers called on him to convene airline, airport and labor leaders to develop
a way to identify anyone involved in last week’s violence who might try to
travel to Washington for the inauguration.
Reps.
Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., and Rick Larsen, D-Wash., said the FAA should aim “(1) to
prevent civil unrest from jeopardizing aviation safety and leading to injury or
worse during flight, and (2) to limit the chance that the Nation’s commercial
airline system could be used as a means of mass transportation to Washington,
D.C., for further violence.”
More
protests are expected in Washington beginning Sunday. D.C. Democratic Mayor
Muriel Bowser, Virginia Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam and Maryland Republican
Gov. Larry Hogan urged people to stay away from the capital region because of
last week’s violence and the coronavirus pandemic. As many as 15,000 National
Guard troops could be deployed to help maintain order.
This
week, major airlines said they are continuing to work with law enforcement
agencies after stepping up security following violence at the
Capitol.
Airport
officials said local and federal law enforcement officials will be highly
visible. And airlines, including American, which has a large presence at Reagan
National Airport, are adding staffing at key hubs to manage possible
incidents.
“Passengers should expect to see a heightened law
enforcement presence from now through the inauguration,” said Christina Saull, a
spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, which manages
Reagan National and Dulles International airports.
In a
bulletin for its 50,000 members over the weekend, the Association of Flight
Attendants-CWA called the unruly groups of passengers “a new kind of threat in
the air.”
Flight
crews sometimes call on other passengers to help them manage people who are
disruptive, but now face the challenge of having to deal with people forming
airborne mobs. The union reminded flight attendants that the best solution is to
keep potential troublemakers off planes.
“If
someone is acting out in an airport, shouting obscenities, and harassing other
passengers – they are likely identified as a flight risk and should not get on a
flight at least until demonstrating otherwise,” the union wrote. “That has been
the practice for years, especially since 9/11.”
Sara
Nelson, the union’s president, previously called for rioters involved in the
storming of the Capitol to be banned from flying, an idea also backed by Rep.
Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., chairman of the House Homeland Security
Committee.
On
Monday, Nelson said she couldn’t discuss specific security measures but “federal
agencies and the airlines are taking this seriously.”
Short
of action by the federal government, airlines have wide latitude to ban problem
passengers.
Last
week, Alaska Airlines announced it banned 14 passengers who were on a flight
from Dulles International to Seattle-Tacoma International airports the day after
the Capitol riot. The passengers were “non-mask compliant, rowdy, argumentative”
and harassed crew members, the airline said.
“We
apologize to our other guests who were made uncomfortable on the flight,” the
airline said in a statement. “We will not tolerate any disturbance on board our
aircraft or at any of the airports we serve.”
The new
security challenge often comes on top of – and often hand-in-hand with – flight
attendants’ daily battles to ensure that passengers wear masks to limit the
spread of the coronavirus. Before the latest round of disruptions, cabin crews
were left to enforce airline policies with little backup from the federal
government.
Over
the weekend, federal air marshals intervened in the case of a woman who began
yelling at flight attendants and other passengers after being asked to wear her
mask on an American Airlines flight from Charlotte to National Airport, the
airline said. Videos of the incident were shared widely online.
The
woman has been banned from the airline while the incident is investigated, but
American declined to say how many people it had added to its list of banned
passengers in the past week.
To
date, Alaska has banned 302 passengers who have violated the airline’s mandatory
mask policy, which went into effect in August. United Airlines, which has banned
more than 600, said in the past week alone it barred an additional 60
people.
Dickson’s statement indicates the FAA is prepared to
take a tough stance against passengers who violate rules. Historically, the
agency’s powers to take action against disruptive passengers have been rarely
used, with it initiating about 1,300 cases in the past decade. The agency
declined to say how many investigations it has begun in recent
days.
An FAA
database logs cases but does not give details about incidents. At least two in
2020 involved passengers who allegedly assaulted flight attendants and also
refused to wear masks. In one case, the FAA proposed a $15,000 civil penalty; in
the other, the agency proposed a $7,500 civil penalty.
In
2018, Congress significantly increased the maximum fine to $35,000 per
violation, up from $1,100. The total can be greater since each incident can
result in multiple violations.
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Southwest flight
diverted after suspicious note found
A Southwest Airlines flight arriving from
Phoenix was taken to a remote area of Baltimore/Washington International
Thurgood Marshall Airport after the crew discovered a threatening
note
BALTIMORE -- A Southwest Airlines flight
arriving from Phoenix was taken to a remote area of Baltimore/Washington
International Thurgood Marshall Airport on Monday after the crew discovered a
threatening note, authorities said.
Airport spokesman Jonathan King said
Southwest Flight 2104 arrived around 5:15 p.m. before it was taken to the remote
location.
According to the statement from Southwest,
the 95 passengers and six crewmembers on board the Boeing 737-800 were taken to
the terminal by bus. The aircraft has a capacity of 175.
The statement didn’t say what the note
contained or where on the plane the note was found. A spokeswoman for Southwest
said authorities cleared the aircraft and the passengers were allowed to claim
their luggage.
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