A Senator Wants To Ban Middle Seats After Finding Himself On A Packed Flight During The Pandemic

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Photo by Spencer Fehrenbacher.
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One day after American Airlines resumed booking flights to capacity, ending its effort to cap the number of passengers on board in response to the pandemic, Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., experienced the policy change firsthand.

Instead of finding his connecting flight to Texas mostly empty, as he had flying American recently, Merkley saw passengers shoulder to shoulder.

“They’re breathing inches from your own nose and mouth, they’re taking off their mask to eat or to drink,” Merkley told The Washington Post. “It feels like a pretty high-risk situation.”

Merkley, wary of contracting the coronavirus en route to his Oregon home where his mother lives in hospice, tweeted a selfie showing the lack of social distancing on his flight and called the airline “incredibly irresponsible.”

Many Twitter users replied with outrage against American Airlines, and some questioned why members of the government like Merkley couldn’t do something about the issue. A day later, the senator announced on Twitter that he would introduce a bill to ban the sale of middle seats through the coronavirus pandemic.

“These airlines are only flying because we’re subsidizing them, because we think they’re essential,” Merkley said. “If they’re essential, then we should do everything we can to make them safe for the people who are using them.”

American Airlines declined The Post’s request for comment on Merkley’s announcement. Katherine Estep – communications director for trade association Airlines for America, which advocates on behalf of most of the country’s major airlines, including American – said in an emailed statement to The Post that U.S. airlines are notifying passengers if social distancing won’t be feasible on their flight.

With the Senate currently out of session, Merkley says his team is trying to understand what leverage they have on the airlines as it crafts the bill.

“The money that’s already been lent out to airlines may be under a contractual form that is hard to modify, but I’m sure there are other strategies, other incentives or penalties that might be possible if the airlines choose to [book full flights],” Merkley said.

As far as his confidence in turning the bill into law, Merkley says he’ll need outside voices and pressure to help the process.

“It is going to be public attention and outcry that is going to have a huge factor, both on members of Congress … and upon the companies thinking about their reputation and their customer relationships,” Merkley said.

Merkley joins other government officials in expressing concern over American Airlines ending their in-flight social distancing efforts.

At a Senate panel last week, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, called the decision “something that is of concern,” while Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said American Airlines’ decision is under critical review by the CDC.

In-flight physical distancing is clearly recommended in the Transportation Department’s Runway for Recovery plan, which states that “airlines should consider the feasibility of limiting seat availability to enable passengers to maintain social distance from each other during the flight,” because “maximum risk reduction results from maintaining a social distance of six feet between passengers.”

The passing of a bill like Merkley’s could bring more consistency in airlines’ coronavirus-focused health and safety precautions, as U.S. airlines have approached the issue differently throughout the pandemic.

Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways and Alaska Airlines plan to continue limiting passengers on board “in some cases, through September.” United Airlines and Spirit Airlines have not attempted socially distanced seating.

(c) 2020, The Washington Post · Natalie B. Compton 

{Matzav.com}


5 COMMENTS

  1. Let this meshugene senator pay for a private plane. Bad enough that everyone has to muzzle their mouths for their entire flight.

    • Well, because when the airlines cry bankruptcy, who do you think bails out the billion dollar companies??? WE DO! The dumb stupid gullible imbecilic idiot taxpayers. We always do. We NEVER question government where our hard earned money is going. Never. It’s poor excuses of a human, like you going to slaughter, just trust government. Whatever they say, we do. Corruption breeds corruption. Enablers like you is what keeps the millionare CEO’s of the airlines enjoying the good life. So, no, the airlines are owned by us, since we paid for them to stay alive. Yes, as part owners we have the right to demand cheaper flights, free check in luggage, and wider seats as a start.

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