Manila Bulletin

Airlines dodge minimum seat size as FAA sees no safety issue

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Hopes for more legroom in increasing­ly cramped airplane cabins were dashed when US regulators, responding to a court order, said they found no need to impose new standards on airlines.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA), in a letter dated Monday, said the agency “has no evidence that there is an immediate safety issue necessitat­ing rule-making at this time.”

Research shows that tighter confines on planes isn’t what slows emergency evacuation­s, the FAA wrote in its response to Flyers Rights, the nonprofit citizens group that sued it claiming evacuation­s could be hindered by tightly packed seating. Instead, exit doors are the choke points that slow evacuation­s, the agency wrote.

The FAA action is the latest move in a swirling controvers­y that has raised hackles from consumers and prompted attempts at legislatio­n by members of Congress.

New slimmer seats have allowed airlines to cram extra rows onto planes, which prompted Flyers Rights to sue the FAA, charging it was creating a safety hazard.

Judge Patricia Ann Millett, writing on behalf of a three-judge panel, ruled partly in favor of the group in July, 2017.

“This is the Case of the Incredible Shrinking Airline Seat,” Millett wrote in her decision last year. “As many have no doubt noticed, aircraft seats and the spacing between them have been getting smaller and smaller, while American passengers have been growing in size.”

The court ordered the FAA to con- duct a “properly reasoned dispositio­n” of safety issues related to seating configurat­ions. It found the agency had used “off-point” studies and “undisclose­d tests using unknown parameters” to justify its initial refusal to review the rules. “That type of vaporous record will not do,” the court said.

In its court-ordered response and eight-page summary of evacuation test results by the agency’s senior specialist for cabin survivabil­ity, Jeffrey Gardlin, said factors other than seat spacing are what slow evacuation­s.

In emergencie­s, flight attendants must first make their way to exits, check outside before opening emergency doors for fire and ensure that emergency slides have inflated. All these steps take time, especially in the chaos of a real emergency, the FAA said.

As a result, passengers are likely to wait at the doors, even when crammed into the tightest configurat­ions with seat rows only 28 inches apart, the agency said.

“This timeline has been repeatedly demonstrat­ed during evacuation tests,” the agency wrote. “The FAA has no evidence that a typical passenger, even a larger one, will take more than a couple of seconds to get out of his or her seat, or that such time will approach the time necessary to get the emergency exits functional.”

As a result of the court case, aircraft manufactur­ers for the first time have agreed to let the FAA release videos of their evacuation tests, which are considered proprietar­y and not subject to public records law. (Bloomberg)

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