Stamford Advocate

U.S.: Number of unruly air travelers down, still too high

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The rate of unruly passengers on airline flights is down sharply from early this year but is mostly unchanged over the past three months and remains more than twice the level seen in late 2020, according to government figures.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion on Thursday took credit for the recent decrease, linking it to the agency’s use of larger fines against violators. Those fines have added up to more than $1 million.

“Our work is having an impact and the trend is moving in the right direction,“said FAA Administra­tor Stephen Dickson, “but we need the progress to continue. This remains a serious safety threat.”

At a congressio­nal hearing Thursday, the chairman of the House Transporta­tion Committee, Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., called for more criminal prosecutio­ns of unruly passengers. He also said airports should stop concession­s from selling alcohol to go.

“Get a great big to-go cup with four shots in it and take it on the airplane — that needs to end,“he said.

Criminal prosecutio­ns are rare, and usually left up to local authoritie­s. The Justice Department said it filed charges in federal court for 16 defendants in a recent 10-month period,

according to travel publicatio­n Skift.

The FAA said this week that airlines have reported 4,385 events involving rowdy passengers this year, with 73% of them involving passengers who refuse to wear face masks, which are required on flights by federal rule.

Airlines reported about

six incidents of disruptive passengers for every 10,000 flights last week, the FAA said. That is about the same as late June but down about half from February and March. It is more than twice as high as the rate of 2.45 incidents per 10,000 flights during the last three months of 2020.

 ?? Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press file photo ?? A sign stating face coverings are required is displayed at O'Hare airport in Chicago.
Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press file photo A sign stating face coverings are required is displayed at O'Hare airport in Chicago.

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