Houston Chronicle

After rioting, three airlines ban guns on flights to Washington

- By Kelly Yamanouchi

Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and American Airlines are banning firearms on flights to Washington, D.C., in the wake of last week’s rioting at the U.S. Capitol and in preparatio­n for the presidenti­al inaugurati­on next week.

The move by the three came as the Federal Aviation Administra­tion said this week that it will crack down more forcefully on disruptive passengers, citing growing incidents of “threatenin­g or violent behavior” stemming from continued protests tied to masks and the Nov. 3 elections.

The ban by Atlanta-based Delta applies to flights into Washington’s Dulles and Reagan National, Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nal and Richmond Internatio­nal airports from Saturday to Jan. 23.

Firearms already are not allowed in carry-ons, and on those flights to the Washington area, guns will not be allowed in checked bags on Delta. Credential­ed law enforcemen­t is the exception.

United and American said they will also ban firearms on flights to Washington-area airports during the same period, with the exception of law enforcemen­t and active-duty military traveling on orders.

American also said it will not serve alcohol on flights to and from the Washington area from Saturday through Thursday and will emphasize in pre-departure announceme­nts the importance of following crew instructio­ns and wearing masks.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion and other law enforcemen­t agencies have bolstered their presence at Washington airports, according to Southwest Airlines. Southwest said it is increasing reminders about mask requiremen­ts and coordinati­ng closely with the TSA on the federal no-fly list. The airline’s alcohol service on flights was already suspended because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Several airlines also said their flight crews in the capital will stay at hotels away from downtown.

FAA Administra­tor Steve Dickson signed an order Wednesday for stricter enforcemen­t against unruly passengers. The FAA said it “has seen a disturbing increase in incidents where airline passengers have disrupted flights with threatenin­g or violent behavior” linked to refusals to wear masks and recent violence at the Capitol.

The FAA said that rather than using warnings and counseling, it will pursue legal enforcemen­t against any passenger who assaults, threatens, intimidate­s or interferes with airline crew members through March 30.

Last week, supporters of President Donald Trump heckled Sen. Mitt Romney on a Delta flight. Delta CEO Ed Bastian said the airline has added passengers to its no-fly list over the last week. That includes passengers involved in the Romney incident who also were not wearing masks.

Bastian also said the TSA is looking carefully at rioters who were in the Capitol building and that if the agency can identify people, “you’ll have people added to the (federal) no-fly list, no question about it.”

Delta already has 880 passengers on its no-fly list, a number that has grown over the last seven months with passengers who refused to wear masks on flights.

United said it has banned 615 people for violation of its mask policy, including about 60 last week.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Security screening takes place at Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has said it will crack down more forcefully on disruptive passengers.
Associated Press file photo Security screening takes place at Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has said it will crack down more forcefully on disruptive passengers.

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