The Mercury News

Parents, kids separated more often with new airline seating

- By Kristen Leigh Painter

Celia Hahn didn’t think much of it when she didn’t receive a seat assignment while booking flights for her family last year.

On her Delta Air Lines reservatio­n she entered the ages of her two twin boys, then 8, and assumed they’d be seated next to her. Instead, because of the type of tickets she booked, they were scattered throughout the plane from Atlanta to Minneapoli­s-St. Paul. They weren’t allowed to swap seats with generous strangers until the flight took off.

“We took off and my kids were in different parts of the plane crying,” she said. “People were willing to give up their seats, but it was stressful and more so than it needs to be.”

Air travel experts say holiday periods like this week are ripe for such problems.

The U.S. Department of Transporta­tion recently decided against implementi­ng a policy that would require airlines to seat minor children next to an accompanyi­ng adult. This leaves it up to the discretion of the airlines as to how it handles family bookings when seat assignment­s are not included in the price of their tickets.

Each U.S. airline’s policy is different, but parents like Hahn often realize once it’s too late they’ll be separated from their children.

Changes in the airline industry over the past several years have created prime conditions for such situations to arise. First, airlines started packing planes fuller, leaving less wiggle room for swapping seats. Second, the airline’s number crunchers realized not every airplane seat is worth the same amount of money. They assigned incrementa­l values to each seat based on a variety of desirabili­ty factors — like legroom, exit rows, amount of recline, distance from a bathroom and the age-old window, middle or aisle seat preference.

But it wasn’t until the advent of “basic economy” airfares, the cheapest seats that don’t allow customers to pick their seats without paying a fee, that family seating really got complicate­d.

“These problems are just going to occur more frequently,” said Bob Mann, a Port Washington, N.Y.based aviation analyst. “It’s a real issue and I don’t think the DOT has done itself any favor by taking a pass on it.”

In 2016, Congress instructed the DOT to review and, if appropriat­e, establish a policy for airlines to seat passengers under 13 next to an accompanyi­ng family member or adult who was over 14 years old.

Several years later, DOT concluded it wasn’t a big enough problem to mandate a solution. Instead, the agency created a webpage that has links to every U.S. airline’s family seating policy.

According to documents obtained through a public records request by Consumer Reports, the DOT received 136 complaints between March 2016 and November 2018 related to airlines separating children from their parents or guardians.

“Numerous complaints involve airlines knowingly assigning seats apart from family for children as young as 2 years old,” according to a Consumer Reports review of the complaints.

Airlines say they do everything they can to make it clear to passengers during booking what is and is not included with their airfare, especially for basic economy. They also point out passengers can always buy the higher fare class that includes seat selection.

After Hahn booked her family’s flights, she followed instructio­ns and checked in 24 hours before their scheduled departure. Only middle seats scattered throughout the plane remained open.

She called Delta and was told she could get seats together at the ticket counter. After arriving early for their outbound flights at Minneapoli­s-St. Paul Internatio­nal Airport, she was able to get seats together for three of the four legs of their round-trip to Belize. The last leg home — from Atlanta to MSP — looked full and the agent said they’d have to wait until the flight took off to rearrange their seats with strangers.

“I was pretty irate. How can you seat my minor child next to a stranger?” Hahn said. Since then, she has reluctantl­y booked the more expensive tickets, but says not everyone can afford to do that or understand­s the consequenc­es of booking the cheaper fares.

A Delta spokesman said, “Regardless of the type of ticket purchased, Delta works with customers on a case-by-case basis to ensure their travel needs are met. When customers have seating questions, we encourage them to reach out to us as soon as possible to allow for the opportunit­y to address their concerns.”

 ?? COURTESY OF RICHARD TSONG ?? Celia Hahn was separated from her twin boys, Curry, left, and Ryan, right, during a Delta flight last Thanksgivi­ng.
COURTESY OF RICHARD TSONG Celia Hahn was separated from her twin boys, Curry, left, and Ryan, right, during a Delta flight last Thanksgivi­ng.

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