The Star Malaysia - Star2

Taking care of pet cargo

- By ROBERT CHANNICK

REELING from a string of high-profile mishaps involving pets, the US airline industry is launching a new certificat­ion programme designed to improve the safety of animal passengers.

The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, a trade organisati­on representi­ng 280 airlines, announced the programme earlier this month. It takes into account both physical and emotional needs across breeds and species in an effort to safely get animals to their destinatio­ns.

“Animal owners and shippers rely heavily on airlines to carry their precious cargo,” Nick Careen, the associatio­n’s senior vice president for cargo, said in a news release. “As an industry, we have a duty of care to ensure that standards and best practices are in place around the world to protect the welfare of these animals.”

The new certificat­ion standard comes in the wake of a series of incidents involving pets travelling on United Airlines, including the death last month of a French bulldog puppy that was stowed in an overhead bin at a flight attendant’s direction on a Houston-to-New York flight.

United also had several pet cargo mishaps last month, sending a Kansas City-bound German shepherd to Japan and diverting a St Louis-bound flight to Akron, Ohio, after mistakenly loading a dog. Passengers aboard the diverted flight were compensate­d.

Chicago-based United suspended its PetSafe cargo programme while conducting a review of its practices and policies that will conclude on May 1. There is no specific date set for pet cargo service to resume, according to airline spokesman Charlie Hobart.

Beyond the airline’s internal review, he said United would look into the new global certificat­ion standard. “We’d consider any reasonable recommenda­tion that improves the overall safety and comfort of all animals that we fly,” Hobart said.

The new internatio­nal certificat­ion programme will cover everything from dogs and cats to farm and zoo animals. The associatio­n said the certificat­ion standards will go beyond physical well-being, taking into considerat­ion “the emotional response of the animals when placed in a special-purpose, if unfamiliar, environmen­t by trained profession­als.” – Chicago Tribune/ Tribune News Service

 ?? — Dreamstime/TNS ?? The new internatio­nal certificat­ion programme will cover everything from dogs and cats to farm and zoo animals.
— Dreamstime/TNS The new internatio­nal certificat­ion programme will cover everything from dogs and cats to farm and zoo animals.

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