Los Angeles Times

Dog tragedy spurs legislatio­n

Senators introduce a bill that would forbid airlines from putting pets in overhead bins.

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com

The death of a French bulldog on a United Airlines flight this week has prompted a policy change by the carrier and motivated two U.S. senators to propose legislatio­n protecting pets traveling by air.

The dog died on a 3 1⁄2-hour trip from Houston to New York after a flight attendant instructed the dog’s owner to put the carrier holding the pet into the overhead bin because the carrier did not fit under the seat.

The death prompted an outcry from animal welfare groups, including a call from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, that the flight attendant involved in the incident be fired and charged with animal cruelty.

The district attorney’s office in Harris County, Texas, which includes the Houston airport where the flight originated, said it plans to investigat­e the case through its animal cruelty task force.

United Airlines issued a statement, saying the flight attendant did not hear or understand when the dog owner told the flight attendant that the dog was inside the carrier. It’s a claim that has been disputed by the dog’s owner and other passengers who have said on social media that the puppy barked for a while after it was put in the overhead compartmen­t.

Under a policy change that will begin by April, the Chicago-based carrier said it plans to give passengers brightly colored bag tags to help flight attendants identify onboard luggage that contains pets.

Meanwhile, Sens. John Kennedy (R-La.) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) filed legislatio­n Thursday aiming to prohibit airlines from putting animals in overhead baggage compartmen­ts. The bill was dubbed the Welfare of Our Furry Friends Act.

The president of the Humane Society of the United States, Kitty Block, praised Kennedy and Cortez Masto for introducin­g the bill.

“Pets are members of our families and should be treated with kindness and respect at all times,” she said.

In 2017, 24 animals died, 15 others were injured and one was lost on commercial flights, out of nearly 507,000 animals transporte­d, according to the Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics.

That amounts to a rate of less than one animal incident for every 10,000 animals flown. Most of the incidents — 31 of 40 — occurred on United Airlines.

The dog’s death comes nearly a year after a passenger was bloodied and battered when he was dragged off an overbooked United Airlines flight in Chicago for refusing to give up the seat.

United also acknowledg­ed that, due to a mix-up Tuesday, a German shepherd bound for Kansas City from Oregon was accidental­ly flown to Japan.

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