From News Nation:
“Rate of unruly airline
passenger incidents drops sharply since fines imposed, FAA says”
(An officer from the Airport
District Police of Miami International Airport gestures toward a passenger as
he removes him from a United Airlines flight in Miami, on March 17, 2021.)
The rate of unruly airline
passenger incidents has dropped significantly since regulators moved to impose
fines, the Federal Aviation Administration said Thursday. Despite the sharp
decline, incidents are still twice as high as last year, FAA data shows. Unruly
passenger incidents were occurring six times per 10,000 flights as of last week
— a 50% drop from early 2021 when the agency first moved to a “zero-tolerance
policy” against fliers lashing out, it said in a statement.
As of Sept. 21, there have been
4,385 reported unruly passenger incidents, including 3,199 mask-related ones,
FAA data shows. “The trend of unruly passenger incidents is moving in the right
direction. But we need the progress to continue,” FAA Administrator Steve
Dickson said in a statement. “This remains a serious safety threat, and one
incident is one too many.’
The FAA originally announced its
zero-tolerance policy for unruly passengers on Jan. 13, following a “disturbing
increase” in violent or disruptive behavior. The FAA specifically noted a
“proliferation” of such conduct stemming from passengers’ refusal to wear
masks, and “following the January 6, 2021 violence at the U.S. Capitol,”
according to an order signed by Dickson. “We will no longer adjudicate certain
of these unruly passenger cases with counseling or warnings. We’re going to go
straight to enforcement,” Dickson said in an interview with Reuters. U.S. Rep.
Peter DeFazio, who chairs the House Transportation Committee, recognized the
FAA’s fines but said the agency’s safety inspectors “who process these cases
can’t continue at the current rate without some relief” and urged more
cooperation between federal and state authorities as well as with the industry.
Defazio urged airports to do more to prevent passengers from bringing “to go”
alcoholic drinks onboard airplanes. “Even as we continue to fight a pandemic,
the amount of disruption and violent behavior on planes has reached epidemic
proportions,” DeFazio said. It was early in September when the Transportation
Security Administration announced that it increased the penalty for people who
violate the mandate to wear masks on planes, trains and other forms of
transportation to help stop the spread of COVID-19. President Joe Biden warned
that violators should “be prepared to pay.” The Department of Homeland Security
says the new fines will remain in effect until at least Jan. 18.
In August, the FAA levied an
additional $531,545 in civil penalties, an amount that marks the FAA’s largest
single proposal of fines against any group of passengers since the start of the
“zero-tolerance” policy. The fines were levied against 34 passengers, one of
whom was hit with $45,000 in proposed civil penalties alone. That particular
passenger, as described by the FAA, had forced an emergency landing of a
JetBlue flight after allegedly throwing objects at other customers — including
his own carry-on luggage — and lying in the aisle of the plane. He is also said
to have grabbed one of the flight attendant’s ankles before “putting his head
up her skirt.” The agency has called on airlines to do more to address unruly
passengers. Lawmakers have also launched hearings into the issue, with some
Democrats calling on the Department of Justice to prosecute disruptive and
violent air passengers. Interfering with the duties of a crewmember violates
federal law, the FAA stated, tweeting out: “Unruly passengers don’t fly.”
^ While the number is going down
it is still way too high. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/unruly-airline-passengers/
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