SFGate: Straighten up and fly right

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Sunday, February 17, 2008 (SF Chronicle)
Straighten up and fly right
Debra J. Saunders


   Start with the title, the Airline Passengers' Bill of Rights. Bill of
rights? That smacks of the unattractive trend in America of even pampered
people's quickness to see themselves as victims, when they have no idea
what real hardship is.
   Kate Hanni is a former Napa real estate agent who became a full-time
passenger advocate after being stuck in a plane on the tarmac in 2006 for
nine hours - she claims and contemporary stories reported, without
adequate food, water or toilets. Hanni told the New York Times that her
nine hours on the ground constituted "imprisonment." She added, when we
spoke over the phone, that a coach seat is smaller than of space mandated
for each prisoner of war under the Geneva Conventions. "People were
victimized that night," Hanni told The Chronicle's George Raine last year.
That's why she started a nonprofit group - you can find it at
www.flyersrights.org - to fight the airlines and stand up for America's
new victim group, stranded passengers.
   The thing is, for all of her over-the-top rhetoric about victimization,
imprisonment and passenger rights - which, it is important to note,
passengers cede to the pilot and crew when they board a plane - the lady
has a point.
   And I have to believe that if the airlines had been more responsive to
complaints such as Hanni's, she would not have found so much support from
the flying public and lawmakers.
   Hanni's journey began on Dec. 29, 2006, when Hanni, her husband and two
sons set out from SFO for Alabama by way of Dallas. Because of a
mechanical problem, their Dallas-bound flight, American Airlines flight
1348, left an hour late. That hour delay put the plane into a series of
storms moving across West Texas. Flight 1348 was one of 85 American
flights diverted from Dallas.
   Flight 1348 then sat on the Austin tarmac for nine hours. Hanni said she
got water from the bathroom sink, and she gave her only food (pretzels) to
her son. Families ran out of diapers. The stench was unbearable.
   Worst of all, unlike the flight diversion caused by bad weather, the hou=
rs
on the tarmac were avoidable. As the Wall Street Journal reported at the
time, American Airlines saved its four gates for regularly scheduled
planes, and denied gate access to flight 1348. Finally the captain, at
risk to his own career, told passengers he was going to an empty gate -
without permission.
   As Hanni sees it, the airline put money before the safety of passengers,
some of whom had medical issues. So she put together a list of "rights" -
such as letting passengers deplane after three hours, making sure
passengers have adequate food and water, as well as access to medical
services and working toilets, and reimbursing passengers for 150 percent
of ticket price for long delays, for whatever reason.
   Lawmakers have offered much pared-down versions of Hanni's package. Rep.
Mike Thompson, D-St. Helena, has introduced a federal version the bill.
New York has its own measure, and Ess Eff Assemblyman Mark Leno has
introduced a bill for California.
   Give credit where credit is due. Hanni is absolutely right to argue that
it is unhealthy to force people, especially those with health issues, to
sit in planes without fresh air, without potable water, without food, for
hours on end when a plane is on the ground. The government should require
that airlines have the necessary provisions, and because the airlines lack
the simple manners to release passengers after they've been sitting on the
ground for hours, Washington should pass regulations to force them to do
it.
   I'm all for airlines making money - but not when they turn a plane into =
an
unhealthy human stew.
   David A. Castelveter, chief spokesman for the airline industry lobby, the
Air Transport Association told the New York Times that Hanni should not be
the focus. "It's about the issue. You can't legislate customer service."
   But if lawsuits from passengers with health problems and lawsuits from
passengers like Hanni and fellow travelers who have outrage issues - not
to mention all that negative publicity - cannot get the airlines to
straighten up and fly right, they deserve to be regulated.
   Reasonably regulated.
   I still worry about a country in which people view nine hours on the
tarmac as intolerable adversity. What do we do when something really bad
happens - and there is no on-flight service?
   But when airlines subject passengers to unsanitary and unhealthy
conditions, when there is no necessity, they have only themselves to blame
for creating Kate Hannis.

   E-mail: dsaunders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -------------------------------------=
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Copyright 2008 SF Chronicle

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