The Norwalk Hour

Airline workers battle mask resistance

- By Michael Laris

As the man returned from the lavatory with a mask dangling from one ear, a flight attendant asked him to put it on properly.

"Why? Is something going on that I should know about?" the passenger asked, before grabbing the mask and ripping the string. "Damn it, I guess I can't wear it now."

Other passengers have verbally abused and taunted flight attendants trying to enforce airline mask requiremen­ts, treating the potentiall­y lifesaving act as a pandemic game of cat-andmouse. A loophole allowing the removal of masks while consuming food and beverages is a favorite dodge.

Asked to mask up, one passenger pulled out a large bag of popcorn and nibbled her way through it, kernel by kernel, stymieing the cabin crew for the length of the flight. Others blew off requests by chomping leisurely on apple slices, between occasional coughs, or lifting an empty plastic cup and declaring: "I am drinking!"

The displays of rule-bucking intransige­nce are described in more than 150 aviation safety reports filed with the federal government since the start of the pandemic and reviewed by The Washington Post. The reports provide an unguarded accounting of bad behavior by airline customers, something executives hit by a steep drop in travel and billions in pandemic-related losses are loath to share themselves.

Some reports raise safety concerns beyond the risk of coronaviru­s infection. A flight attendant reported being so busy seeking mask compliance that the employee couldn't safely reach a seat in time for landing.

One airline captain, distracted by mask concerns, descended to the wrong altitude. The repeated talk of problem passengers in Row 12 led the captain to mistakenly head toward 12,000 feet, not a higher altitude given by air traffic control to keep planes safely apart. The error was caught, and "there was no conflictin­g traffic," the captain wrote.

Some passengers are portrayed as oblivious, obstinate, foul-mouthed and, at times, dangerous. One called a flight attendant a "Nazi." Another "started to rant how the virus is a political hoax and that she doesn't wear a mask," a flight attendant reported.

With millions of passengers ignoring warnings from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to refrain from holiday travel, the reports offer an X-ray into the country's deeper failures against the coronaviru­s - and insights into the pitfalls and possibilit­ies facing a new presidenti­al administra­tion.

While the White House under President Donald Trump has, at times, been dismissive or hostile toward masks, President-elect Joe Biden is making a patriotic appeal to "mask up for 100 days," whatever people's politics. Biden has said he will sign an order on his first day requiring masks for "interstate travel on planes, trains and buses." How well those efforts will work remains to be seen.

Experts in psychology and decision-making say hostility toward wearing masks, even within the shared confines of a passenger jet, has been fueled by politiciza­tion - but also by skewed incentives and inconsiste­nt messaging.

"The reinforcem­ent principles are backward," said Paul Slovic, who studies the psychology of risk at the University of Oregon.

The usual signs of danger, and rewards for following potentiall­y bothersome rules, are thrown off by a virus that is spread easily by people who don't know they have it, Slovic said.

"You get an immediate benefit for not following the guidelines because you get to do what you want to do," Slovic said. "And you don't get punished for doing the wrong thing" because it's not immediatel­y clear who is being harmed.

The "squishines­s of the requiremen­t" to wear masks on planes also undermines the message that they are critical for public health, Slovic said. In contrast, he cites the rigid clarity of the ban on flying with a firearm. "It's not, 'You can carry it as long as you don't use it,' "Slovic said.

But passengers are allowed to drop their masks to snack and sip beverages. "When you start opening it up to eating, the whole thing kind of weakens," Slovic said.

Applying mask rules also worsens the already strained position of flight attendants, who are front-line enforcers even as they keep their usual safety responsibi­lities, experts said.

"Flight attendants are dealing with mask compliance issues on every single flight they work right now," said Taylor Garland, spokeswoma­n for the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants-CWA, noting that those efforts range from friendly reminders to facing passengers "actively challengin­g the flight attendants' authority."

The Department of Transporta­tion in October rejected a petition to require masks on airplanes, subways and other forms of transporta­tion, with Secretary Elaine Chao's general counsel saying the department "embraces the notion that there should be no more regulation­s than necessary."

The nation's aviation regulator has deferred to airlines on masks, with Federal Aviation Administra­tion chief Stephen Dickson telling senators at a June hearing "we do not plan to provide an enforcemen­t specifical­ly on that issue."

Such matters are more appropriat­ely left to federal health authoritie­s, Dickson argued. "As Secretary Chao has said, we believe that our space is in aviation safety, and their space is in public health," Dickson said, referring to the CDC and other health officials.

Airline representa­tives say they take mask usage seriously and the overwhelmi­ng majority of customers comply. Some airlines have banned passengers for the length of the pandemic for refusing to mask up. Many have eliminated medical exemptions in their mask requiremen­ts.

"Of the hundreds of thousands of passengers who have flown with us, we have only needed to ban about 370 customers for not complying," United Airlines spokeswoma­n Leslie Scott said. Delta said its mask-related no-fly list includes about 600 people, despite carrying about 1 million people each week.

Resistance by some passengers prompted Alaska Airlines to begin issuing yellow cards, akin to the warnings in soccer, to problem passengers.

The initial yellow card said employees would file a report that could result in a passenger being suspended. A later version was more aggressive, saying continued defiance would lead to a flight ban "immediatel­y upon landing," even if the customer had a connecting flight.

Alaska Airlines has barred 237 passengers since August, and "in more than half of these incidents we also canceled onward or returning travel," spokeswoma­n Cailee Olson said.

American Airlines declined to release numbers of banned customers, as did Southwest, which said in a statement it appreciate­s "the ongoing spirit of cooperatio­n among customers and employees as we collective­ly take care of each other while striving to prevent the spread of COVID-19."

Yet a small, uncooperat­ive minority can wreak outsize havoc, safety reports show.

The anonymous reports are collected in a National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion database, part of a program meant to increase aviation safety by encouragin­g employees to provide candid descriptio­ns of emerging problems without fear of reprisal. Names of people filing the reports, and their airlines, are removed by NASA before they are made available to regulators at the FAA and the public.

NASA analysts screen the reports to weed out irrelevant filings and may call back filers to clarify safety points. But its analysts do not try to verify people's identities or the accuracy of the reports.

The database shows some fliers treat airline mask requiremen­ts as a seemingly asinine rule to evade, akin to sneaking a late look at text messages after phones are supposed to be in airplane mode. Passengers berate fight attendants about their noncomplia­nt cabin mates. Some reports read like cries for help.

"It all has to stop," pleaded one flight attendant.

"In the future I would like to feel safe while doing my job," said another. Among the incidents:

- A woman refused to wear her mask as the plane rolled away from the terminal, saying it made her ill, and the pilot pulled over temporaril­y to try to avoid returning to the gate. She continued to resist but finally agreed.

"As soon as we took off, she took it off again and kept it off the entire flight," the flight attendant reported.

- A man started down the aisle, pausing about 18 inches from a flight attendant.

"He sneezed directly in my face, making no attempt to cover his mouth, pull up his mask or turn towards the row 1 window," the employee wrote. The flight attendant, who was wearing a face covering, judged the act unintentio­nal and tried to blot away the remnants.

- A woman propped her foot up and painted her toenails with her mask below her chin, despite several requests to wear it properly. After another passenger appealed for more to be done, the woman acquiesced, then loudly instructed the flight attendant to "go away!"

After landing, she cut in line to rush off the plane. "Although we understand the importance of wanting to retain customer loyalty, this kind of behavior should not be tolerated for the sake of one over an entire cabin of guests and employees," the flight attendant wrote.

- An immunocomp­romised passenger was furious at the lack of enforcemen­t as another customer snacked incessantl­y on chocolate. The concerned passenger then removed his mask to complain to the flight attendant.

- A passenger claimed discrimina­tion, arguing he was singled out for enforcemen­t because of his tattoos. "He said 'I am complying, #%$^!' His nostrils were clearly visible," the flight attendant wrote.

- A pilot flouted the mask requiremen­t with what appeared to be a passive-aggressive display, donning a flimsy, see-through veil described as useless for containing airborne particles.

- Flight attendants made an exception and allowed a distraught mother, whose daughter may have had a disability and screamed about the mask requiremen­t, to remain on the plane. They tried cookies, which didn't help, then moved the family to seats three rows from other passengers, who were supportive.

- A customer, after earlier warnings, stuck his maskfree head in the aisle during the safety demonstrat­ion, "making a total mockery out of me," a flight attendant wrote. He repeated his taunt when the plane was fourth in line for takeoff. The captain turned around, and the man was taken off the plane.

The obstinacy cuts against basic health precaution­s. Experts in cabin air say masks are critical tools for safety. Cabin air is run through powerful filters, mixed with outside air and recirculat­ed. But it takes several minutes for all air to be vented out of the cabin, giving the coronaviru­s and other viruses the opportunit­y to spread.

A Harvard study funded by the aviation industry said flying can be done with a relatively low risk of coronaviru­s infection if precaution­s are followed. It said masks are "perhaps the most essential layer" among measures to reduce transmissi­on.

The study said removing masks to eat should be kept to an "absolute minimum," and straws should be used when feasible. "When one passenger briefly removes a mask to eat or drink, other passengers in close proximity should keep their masks on," researcher­s said.

Trump and some of his advisers, meanwhile, have stoked divisions over masks.

The president mocked Biden's frequent mask use, presided over White House events that flouted mask guidelines and relied on a former pandemic adviser who wrongly argued masks were ineffectiv­e. The White House also blocked a nationwide order, drafted by the CDC, that would have required masks on all forms of public transporta­tion.

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