The Niagara Falls Review

Airlines accused of ignoring pandemic precaution­s

Carriers insist measures are in place that allows for end to seat distancing

- JAKE KIVANÇ

When Bobbi Jo Green booked a flight back in May for her, her husband and her children to see two ailing family members, she was counting on the airline’s physical distancing rules to still be in place.

But just three weeks before Green and her family were set to fly from Edmonton to Sydney, N.S., on July 17, WestJet announced it was ending its policy of leaving the middle seats on its flights empty.

“I was devastated,” Green said, noting her family spends every summer in Nova Scotia with her 93-year-old grandmothe­r who is suffering from severe dementia and another family member with an incurable form of cancer.

“We all knew it could very well be the last summer we would spend with them.”

When Green called WestJet to see if any accommodat­ions could be made, she told the company she has a heart condition that puts her in the highrisk category for COVID-19.

Despite her pleas, Green said the airline told her it was unable to make any special accommodat­ions, nor would it let her change the date of the flight to before July 1, when the rules were relaxed, without paying a fee.

And Green’s not alone: As provinces begin to relax domestic travel restrictio­ns, the cessation of physical distancing rules by two of Canada’s biggest airlines — WestJet and Air Canada — is causing frustratio­n and grief among some of their passengers.

Gabor Lukacs, head of the advocacy group Air Passenger Rights Canada, said he has fielded countless complaints from passengers during the COVID-19 pandemic, many of which are related to the same issues: airlines refusing to offer refunds or accommodat­ions amid the abolition of physical distancing rules.

While he acknowledg­es the effort to fill seats is due to airlines attempting to recoup billions in lost revenue, Lukacs argues the companies risk deterring customers from flying at all.

“The question is: Do we allow economic considerat­ions to override public health? We don’t allow supermarke­ts to sell spoiled meat because it’s cheaper. Are we going to allow doctors to skip disinfecti­ng their tools to save the cost?”

In response to criticisms, WestJet forwarded The Canadian Press a statement from a July 3 blog post regarding changes to its seat distancing policy.

“The blocked middle seat was introduced at the beginning of the pandemic before the myriad of safety measures were put in place and mandated on board,” the statement reads.

“Seat distancing was never intended to be in place permanentl­y or throughout the pandemic.”

The post notes a number of measures WestJet has taken to help stop the spread of COVID-19 on its flights, including mandatory masking, preboardin­g questionna­ires for all passengers, temperatur­e screening, thorough cleaning of aircraft between flights and the restrictio­n of in-flight dining services.

As of Tuesday afternoon, Air Canada did not respond to a request for comment.

However, the company has also denied it’s putting passengers and staff at risk by filling flights up, pointing to other safety measures as mitigating the risk of spreading COVID-19.

Air Canada provided a similar statement, acknowledg­ing the inconvenie­nce the change may have caused to customers.

But some passengers report first-hand experience­s in which masking protocols were not followed.

Maureen Isabel Green, 31, flew from Vancouver to Fredericto­n three weeks ago with Air Canada to visit her family, and said she was shocked by the lax use of masks by both airport employees and the passengers on her two connecting flights.

“I just think of all the people who are getting on a flight and risking their life, or risking the life of the people they’re going to visit, because some people don’t want to wear a mask for a few hours,” she said.

Green, who is a health-care worker, said there were numerous instances on her flight from Vancouver to Montreal where a group of young, male passengers took off their masks when flight attendants were not present.

While at the Montreal airport, Green said a man was able to board a flight without wearing a mask, simply by telling attendants he had a medical condition that prevented him from doing so.

Air travel has been at the centre of several headline-grabbing incidents throughout the pandemic — particular­ly since travel restrictio­ns have been eased in some regions.

On July 2, health authoritie­s in B.C. warned the passengers of four separate flights that they may have been exposed to COVID-19.

Just a day before the Nova Scotia Health Authority warned passengers of a Toronto-to-Halifax WestJet flight from the previous week that they may have been exposed to COVID-19.

And on Sunday, a Halifax man reportedly walked off of a St. John’s-bound flight after learning he was the only passenger travelling within the so-called “Atlantic bubble,” sparking discussion about the effectiven­ess of airlines’ COVID-prevention policies.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Advocate Gabor Lukacs acknowledg­es airlines are attempting to recoup billions in lost revenue by allowing all seats to be filled, but he argues such moves risk deterring customers from flying.
JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Advocate Gabor Lukacs acknowledg­es airlines are attempting to recoup billions in lost revenue by allowing all seats to be filled, but he argues such moves risk deterring customers from flying.

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