Springfield News-Sun

U.S. addresses airline family seating rules, fights ‘junk fees’

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The Transporta­tion Department is rolling out a “dashboard” to let travelers see at a glance which airlines help families with young children sit together at no extra cost.

The announceme­nt Monday comes as the department works on regulation­s to prevent families from being separated on planes. It’s the latest salvo in the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to clamp down on what it calls “junk fees” and to put pressure on airlines to improve service.

The dashboard at www. transporta­tion.gov rewards airlines with a green check if they guarantee that an adult family member can sit next to their young children if seats are available. On Monday, only three of 10 U.S. airlines on the website received a green check: Alaska, American and Frontier.

“Parents traveling with young kids should be able to sit together without an airline forcing them to pay junk fees,” Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a release.

Airlines usually succeed at seating families together, but they have stopped short of making promises. This year, several carriers have pledged to make changes in their seating policies.

Last month, Frontier Airlines said it would automatica­lly seat at least one parent next to any child under 14.

Last week, American Airlines added a guarantee that children 14 and under would be seated next to an accompanyi­ng adult at no extra cost.

United Airlines said it would let families with children under 12 pick adjoining seats at no extra cost starting in early March in certain fare classes.

 ?? AP FILE ?? The U.S. Transporta­tion Department announced Monday it has added a dashboard to its website that helps families understand airlines’ seating rules and fees.
AP FILE The U.S. Transporta­tion Department announced Monday it has added a dashboard to its website that helps families understand airlines’ seating rules and fees.

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