The Mercury News

Airlines drop food service, middle seats as pandemic rages.

Some remove middle seats, cut beverage service

- By Jordan Valinsky CNN

Fliers in the United States have gotten used to bringing their own food, but now they’ll have to bring their own beverages, too.

Major US airlines are implementi­ng substantia­l changes to the few free things passengers still receive on airplanes, including drinks and snacks, because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Delta Air Lines, Southwest and American Airlines

have all announced this week that they’re temporaril­y suspending beverage service and cutting meal service as a way to cut costs and reduce the number of items flight attendants touch.

The changes, which seemed unthinkabl­e just a few weeks ago, are the latest change for the beleaguere­d industry that has dealt with plummeting revenue, strikingly empty flights and the need for government assistance just to survive the year. Some in the industry are calling for domestic flight operations to be temporaril­y shut down.

Here’s what fliers will notice:

American Airlines

Beginning March 27 and for the following month, flights on American that are shorter than 4.5 hours will no longer serve meals in first class. Snacks and food available for purchase in the main cabin have been canceled. And beverages will be available only upon request. It also will no longer sell alcohol in economy, but will continue to serve it in first class.

American is making fewer changes on its long-haul flights, of which there are fewer, anyway, because of travel restrictio­ns from other countries. Separately, American

has shuttered a number of its pre-flight lounges and is no longer accepting checked pets.

To encourage social distancing policies recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, American is reassignin­g seats to customers so they don’t have to sit next to someone else. That means most people will be able to avoid the dreaded middle seat. The changes were made easier because many airlines are flying with only 20% to 30% of seats filled.

Delta Air Lines

Beginning immediatel­y

on domestic and some shorter internatio­nal flights, Delta is reducing the number of snack offerings to two, giving its first class passengers boxed meals and completely eliminatin­g alcoholic drinks for everyone. The only beverage available to order is bottled water. The changes are in addition to eliminatin­g glassware and hot towels

in first class.

The airline said it’s currently “evaluating adjustment­s” for its long-haul internatio­nal flights. A number of its pre-flight lounges, known as the Sky Club, have also been closed because of dwindling passenger traffic.

Southwest Airlines

Southwest doesn’t have first class cabins or lounges, but it’s also making changes. It’s suspending beverage and snack service beginning Wednesday to “limit close public interactio­ns” between

customers and its crew. Canned water will be made available by request.

United Airlines

United told CNN Business that it doesn’t have immediate plans to make changes similar to its rivals. It has tweaked how it’s offering snacks by serving them on a tray instead of letting passengers pick their own, no longer refilling beverages and letting their flight attendants wear gloves during flights.

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 ?? JOHN MOORE — GETTY IMAGES ?? Delta Air Lines is only offering two snacks, giving first class boxed meals and only serving bottled water for beverages on domestic and shorter internatio­nal flights. Its pre-flight lounges, the Sky Club, have been closed due to declining numbers.
JOHN MOORE — GETTY IMAGES Delta Air Lines is only offering two snacks, giving first class boxed meals and only serving bottled water for beverages on domestic and shorter internatio­nal flights. Its pre-flight lounges, the Sky Club, have been closed due to declining numbers.

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