The Columbus Dispatch

Airlines report hundreds of unruly passengers

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WASHINGTON – Airlines have reported more than 500 cases involving unruly passengers since late December, and most started with passengers who refused to wear a face mask, federal officials said Wednesday.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion said it is reviewing more than 450 of the cases and has started enforcemen­t action against about 20 people.

The FAA reported the figures shortly after it extended a “zero-tolerance” policy against unruly people on airline flights. The agency said that under the policy, passengers who disrupt or threaten the safety of a flight could face fines and jail time.

“The number of cases we’re seeing is still far too high, and it tells us urgent action continues to be required,” FAA Administra­tor Stephen Dickson said.

The tougher enforcemen­t stance was due to expire at the end of this month, but the FAA announced Monday that it will stay in place as long as airline passengers are required to wear face masks. Airlines began requiring masks last year. The FAA, which resisted a federal requiremen­t during the Trump administra­tion, added its own mask mandate in January.

The FAA is seeking civil penalties against at least four passengers. The agency announced two new cases on Wednesday.

Civil penalties sought

In one, the FAA said it is proposing a $20,000 fine against a woman who repeatedly ignored flight attendants’ instructio­ns to remain seated and wear her mask, then shouted obscenitie­s and shoved an attendant. Pilots turned around the Dec. 27 Jetblue Airways flight to Puerto Rico and returned to Boston.

The FAA said it is seeking a $12,250 penalty against another Jetblue passenger on a Dec. 31 flight from New York to the Dominican Republic. The man drank alcohol he had brought on board, which violates federal rules, and refused to wear a mask. The man also shouted profanitie­s, slammed overhead bins and threw his bottle behind a seat, the FAA said. The crew asked police to meet the plane after it landed.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE ?? The Federal Aviation Administra­tion reported Wednesday the number of cases involving unruly passengers since late December shortly after it extended a “zero-tolerance” policy on airline flights.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE The Federal Aviation Administra­tion reported Wednesday the number of cases involving unruly passengers since late December shortly after it extended a “zero-tolerance” policy on airline flights.

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