The Guardian (USA)

United Airlines reminds crew not to restrain unruly passengers with duct tape

- Maya Yang

United Airlines has asked its employees to not use duct tape to restrain unruly passengers.

In a memo sent to employees last Friday, United flight attendants were urged to “please remember that there are designated items onboard that may be used in difficult situations, and alternativ­e measures such as tape should never be used”.

As pandemic restrictio­ns lift, flight attendants across the US have been grappling with an unpreceden­ted rise in unruly passenger behavior.

The United memo came soon after American Airlines flight attendants restrained a woman with tape after she tried to open the plane’s doors during a flight.

Shortly after that incident, duct tape was used on Frontier Airlines, when attendants restrained a man in his seat after he acted aggressive­ly and allegedly grabbed an attendant’s breasts.

United attendants have duct-taped passengers before.

In 2003, the airline duct-taped a disruptive passenger on a flight from Honolulu to Los Angeles, after he “began talking and wandering the aisle … pacing and reading the Bible”.

A few years later in 2008, the airline used duct tape on a passenger after she became violent on a Chicago-bound Puerto Rico flight, fighting attendants and grabbing other passengers.

Tape was not used in 2017 when

United attendants dragged a doctor off a flight after he refused to give up his seat to employees of a partner airline. David Dao, then 69 and a father of five, lost teeth and suffered a broken nose and concussion. He sued and the case was settled for an undisclose­d sum.

The United memo also said “the overwhelmi­ng majority of our customers have been on their best behavior … and returned to our flights with confidence and enthusiasm”.

In instances of disorderly behavior, United said, employees should resort to standard de-escalation measures, including using “the huddle process … which involves discussing the situation with the captain, customer service representa­tive and ground security coordinato­r for evaluation and solutions”.

Attendants were also directed to use the safety manual to guide decision-making if they feel a customer should be denied onboard service.

Employees were also reminded that “in the event [they] are unable to reach an agreement with a customer about one of our safety-related policies, [they] should follow [their] regular de-escalation and training process and always use [their] best judgment”.

 ?? Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Airline crews have been managing more disruptive behavior than usual since the pandemic restrictio­ns have eased.
Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/REX/Shuttersto­ck Airline crews have been managing more disruptive behavior than usual since the pandemic restrictio­ns have eased.

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