American Airlines Restricts Power Of Employees To Remove Passengers From Flights

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American Airlines has limited the discretionary ability of employees to remove passengers from flights to all but the most egregious circumstances invovling safety or security.

American Airlines Limits Employee Discretion In Removing Passengers From Flights

Earlier this year, I discussed a very concerning incident in which eight black men, all unrelated and seated in different parts of the aircraft, were removed from an American Airlines flight because one of them allegedly had a foul odor. While they were eventually all allowed back on, the situation was so egregious that it prompted a threat from the NAACP that it was considering reinstating its travel warning against AA.

Furthermore, I’ve discussed several incidents of passengers being removed from an American Airlines flight until they covered up their attire deemed too revealing. It appeared that such policy was enforced unevenly and arbitrarily, often based more on body type than the attire itself.

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In light of that, American Airlines has updated its policy on removing passengers and made it harder for employees like gate agents or flight attendants to remove passengers onboard. As shared by View From The Wing, here is the updated policy:

As an airline, our goal is to welcome all customers unless there is a risk to the safety or security of the flight.
Discrimination based on race, gender, religion, color, sexual orientation or national origin against any customer or team member is unacceptable and will not be tolerated at American Airlines.
Any non-safety or non-security related concerns should originate from customers only, not from team members.
Should non-safety or non-security concerns be raised by a customer, our shared objective is to avoid customer removal. That means groups across the operation work together toward a resolution that both addresses the customer concern and keeps all customer travel intact.
Our charge for every team member – no matter the circumstance – is to lead with respect, discretion, care and empathy.

As I read it, passnegers can generally no longer be thrown off for their wardrobe choice or even if they smell. If a customer (not an employee) does raise an issue that is not related to safety or security, the removal process will be initiated as an option of last resort.

The memo continues:

Two flight attendants must engage the customer who raised the non-safety or non-security concern to try and resolve.
In the rare event resolution to a non-safety or non-security concern isn’t likely and before any customer is asked to get off the aircraft, the captain should contact the CRO.
No matter the path, handling these types of issues with respect, discretion, care and empathy is critical to the solution. How we make our customers feel and the perception we leave them with matters, and we all play an important role in that.
All flight attendants must submit a CERS within 24 hours of the event using the new CERS Event Category: Customer Event non-safety/non-security.
For any issue involving the safety or security of a flight, our captains have the authority to make decisions regarding passenger removal. As is the case today, that should be done after a thorough assessment.

I think these changes are very reasonable and I particularly like that last point. When I got thrown off a flight after a batty flight attendant lied and said I was taking pictures of her, the captain did not even perform an assessment (like ask me my side or ask to see my phone…). He just threw me off and threatened me in doing so.

No, a captain should investigate before s/he throws off a passenger, not just “keep the peace” by automatically siding with the flight attendant.

Yes, the “security” and “safety” exceptions are wide and can be misconstrued, but it’s better than saying that flight attendants can enforce its dress code (“Dress appropriately; bare feet or offensive clothing aren’t allowed”) in a manner they see fit.

CONCLUSION

I’m happy to see AA update its policy that limits the power of flight attendants and other employees to remove passengers from flights for all but the most egregious reasons of safety and security and even then, only with empathy. The embarrassing cases I noted above may have been aberrations rather than standard operating practices, but they still called out for reform.

image: American Airlines