Boston Herald

United tightens alcohol rules

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DALLAS — United Airlines is setting an earlier cutoff time for when pilots must stop drinking alcohol before flights.

The airline is telling pilots they must abstain from alcohol for 12 hours before flights, up from the previous eight hours.

The change in the rule — it’s called “bottle-to-throttle” in the airline business — comes several days after two United pilots were arrested in Scotland and charged with suspicion of being under the influence before a flight to the U.S.

The old eight-hour limit complied with Federal Aviation Administra­tion rules, which also prohibit pilots from flying with a blood-alcohol content at or above 0.04%. Almost all states make it a crime to drive a car at or above 0.08%.

An extra four hours will help social drinkers sober up, although it might not be long enough for a heavily drunken person. Some researcher­s calculate that once someone puts down the bottle, their blood-alcohol level drops 0.015% each hour. At that rate, a drinker could go from 0.12% to zero in eight hours, or from 0.18% to zero in 12 hours.

A United spokesman declined to say whether the change was due to the arrests of two United pilots on Aug. 3 in Glasgow, Scotland, before they were scheduled to operate a flight to Newark, N.J. The flight was canceled.

Representa­tives for American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines said their policies follow the FAA’s current standard of no drinking within eight hours of duty. They said their airlines are not considerin­g any changes. Alaska Airlines said it has a 10-hour no-alcohol rule for pilots.

The arrests of the United pilots followed other recent incidents. In May, an American Airlines pilot received a suspended six-month sentence after pleading guilty in a U.K. court to drinking before a Manchester to Philadelph­ia flight. In July, a Delta pilot was arrested before a flight in Minneapoli­s — airport police said he had an alcoholic container in his possession.

Incidents involving alcohol and on-duty airline employees aren’t limited to pilots. On Aug. 2, a flight attendant was arrested after a United Express flight landed in Indiana. Passengers said she slurred her words during the preflight safety demonstrat­ion, then passed out in her jump seat.

 ?? AP FILE ?? SOBERING CHANGE: United Airlines has tightened its rules pertaining to employee alcohol use, requiring pilots to not drink for 12 hours before flying, an increase from the previous rule of eight hours.
AP FILE SOBERING CHANGE: United Airlines has tightened its rules pertaining to employee alcohol use, requiring pilots to not drink for 12 hours before flying, an increase from the previous rule of eight hours.

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