SFGate: Survey: Public divided on in-flight cell phone use

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Thursday, August 7, 2008 (AP)
Survey: Public divided on in-flight cell phone use
By JOAN LOWY, Associated Press Writer


   (08-07) 10:16 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --
   The friendly skies are not so affable when it comes to using cell phones
on commercial airliners.
   Nearly half of U.S. residents say they would oppose allowing cell phone
use aboard flights even if there were no issues with the phones
interfering with aircraft communications systems, a Department of
Transportation survey finds. About four out of 10 residents said cell
phone use should definitely or probably be permitted.
   But, as any parent of a teenager could have predicted, there is a cell
phone generation gap. Among residents aged 65 and older, about 60 percent
oppose cell phone use in flight, while less than a third support it.
   For people aged 18 to 34, nearly half support cell phone use in flight,
while a little over a third oppose it, the survey found.
   The opinions on in-flight cell phone use were part of the Bureau of
Transportation Statistics' annual household survey, which questioned 979
residents in November 2007 and 1,063 residents in November 2006. The
survey has a plus or minus error rate of about 3 percent.
   The Federal Aviation Administration and the Federal Communications
Commission currently ban passengers from making cell phone calls
in-flight. The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee last week
approved a bill to make the ban permanent.
   The committee's action followed moves by the European Union to let airli=
ne
passengers talk on their cell phones during flight. Some U.S. airlines are
experimenting with in-flight Internet access.
   Lawmakers said they worry that if the ban is lifted, fights will erupt
between passengers who talk loudly on the phones and others who find the
callers obnoxious. Some lawmakers also said they fear domestic airlines
might try to get the cell phone ban lifted so they can charge passengers
extra to sit in no-phone sections. ----------------------------------------=
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Copyright 2008 AP

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