The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FAA extends zero tolerance policy on unruly passengers

More than 500 cases reported, mostly over face mask requiremen­t.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kelly. yamanouchi@ ajc. com

The Federal Aviation Admini st ration i s extending i t s zero tolerance policy for unruly passengers as hundreds of passengers refuse to comply with mask requiremen­ts on flights.

The stricter policy will stay in place as long as the mask order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion remains in effect. Airlines began requiring masks last May, and President Joe Biden signed an order in January for a federal mask mandate on airplanes and in airports, along with other forms of transporta­tion.

FAA administra­tor Steve Dickson, a former Delta Air Lines executive, said in a statement the policy directs “strong enforcemen­t action against any passenger who disrupts or threatens the safety of a flight, with penalties ranging from fines to jail time.”

More than 500 unruly passenger c ases have been reported to the agency by airlines since late December, with the majority of them involving noncomplia­nce with the mask requiremen­t, according to the FAA. The agency said it has started 20 enforcemen­t actions while reviewing the other cases.

A Delta passenger who boarded a Miami- Atlanta flight in October faced a proposed $ 27,500 fine last month after allegedly hitting a flight attendant under her left eye, according to the FAA.

The passenger’s traveling companion allegedly refused to wear a mask, secure his tray table and fasten his seat belt, so the plane returned to the gate and both passengers were asked to get off the plane. The passenger accompanyi­ng the man who did not want to follow instructio­ns “began yelling expletives at the flight attendant and other passengers, and struck the flight attendant under her left eye,” according to the FAA.

Federal law prohibits interferin­g with crews, physically assaulting or threatenin­g to physically assault anyone on a plane.

Last week, the FAA proposed a $ 14,500 penalty against a passenger on a December Jetblue flight from New York to the Domini c an Republic who refused to wear a mask and drank alcohol he brought on board, which is prohibited. The flight returned to John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport and landed 4,000 pounds overweight because of the fuel l oaded onto the plane for the internatio­nal flight.

The Associated Press reported that a passenger on an Alaska Airlines flight from Seattle to Denver this month faced a federal charge after refusing to wear a mask, then standing up and urinating in the cabin.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/ AJC 2020 ?? Airlines began requiring masks last May, and President Joe Biden signed an order i n January for a federal mask mandate on airplanes and in airports.
HYOSUB SHIN/ AJC 2020 Airlines began requiring masks last May, and President Joe Biden signed an order i n January for a federal mask mandate on airplanes and in airports.

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