Texarkana Gazette

Shrinking legroom and airline passenger safety

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If you fly coach often, you’ve experience­d this: You’re in a window seat, and you’ve got to move toward the aisle to reach the lavatory. You contort around the knees of passengers in middle and aisle seats, while nudging seatbacks of the row in front of you to create an inch or two of clearance. Contort, nudge, apologize. It’s vexing—a reminder that flying coach can be the equivalent of steerage.

But is it also unsafe? Imagine a fire in the cabin. Shrinking legroom on airliners brings into question whether emergency evacuation­s are jeopardize­d by seats made smaller and smaller to maximize revenue for airlines. At what point does diminishin­g legroom elevate from a matter of comfort to a matter of safety?

A federal court believes it’s time to investigat­e whether we have reached that point. We’re chilling Champagne now.

Citing safety reasons, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has ordered the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to “adequately address” safety concerns associated with dwindling seat size and distances between rows. “As a matter of basic physics,” Judge Patricia Millett wrote, “at some point seat and passenger dimensions would become so squeezed as to impede the ability of passengers to extricate themselves from their seats and get over to an aisle.”

The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by the passenger advocacy group FlyersRigh­ts.org that seeks to force the FAA to put a hold on further shrinking of seats and legroom. Millett dubbed the suit “The Case of the Incredible Shrinking Airline Seat.”

Thank you, Judge Millett. For you, two flutes of Champagne.

Though we squirm and fidget in shrinking seat space like everyone else, we’ve frowned on attempts to regulate the size of seats for the sake of making the experience of flying more comfortabl­e. Ultimately, it’s up to the airlines to decide what level of comfort to provide, and it’s up to us to pay for more legroom or upgrade to a more comfy flying experience if we want it badly enough. This essentiall­y is the bargain that has allowed basic airfares to plummet (as measured in inflation-adjusted dollars). Think of fares as user fees; the more airline resources we use, the more we pay.

However, if seat space and legroom get miniaturiz­ed to the point that safety is compromise­d, then we agree with Millett—the FAA has to step in.

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