U.S. warns airlines it may issue regulations barring child seating fees
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[July 09, 2022]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S.
Transportation Department on Friday notice warned airlines it may issue
regulations prohibiting them from charging extra fees to allow young
children to sit next to accompanying family members.
The agency, citing a 2016 law that required it to review U.S. airline
family seating policies, issued a notice urging airlines to ensure
children age 13 or younger are seated next to an accompanying adult with
no additional charge to the maximum extent practicable, and said it
could take regulatory action later this year after it reviews airline
policies.
The Transportation Department said it has received few complaints about
the issue but said "even one incident is one too many."
It added that airlines should implement policies enabling workers "to
make immediate adjustments as needed to ensure young children are able
to be seated adjacent to accompanying adults" but are not required to
provide seats that would result in an upgrade.
The agency said airlines using seat blocking should monitor its ability
to ensure adequate numbers of seats are blocked to meet demand for
adjacent seats for passengers traveling with young children.
Last month, the department noted that U.S. consumers lodged more than
quadruple the number of complaints against U.S. airlines in April
compared with pre-pandemic levels.
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Travelers check in at John F. Kennedy International Airport during
the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant in Queens, New York
City, U.S., December 26, 2021. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File Photo/File
Photo
Travelers are facing a difficult summer as airlines
face near-record demand and as they rebuild staff levels after
thousands of workers left the industry during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Air passengers are facing long lines, crowded airports and few open
seats.
Airlines for America, a group representing Delta Air Lines, United
Airlines, American Airlines and others, said, "U.S. airlines have
always worked to accommodate customers who are traveling together,
especially those traveling with children, and will continue to do
so. Each carrier sets their own policies that fit individual
business models."
The Transportation Department plans to propose formal rules by
August codifying requirements airlines provide prompt refunds when
carriers cancel or make a significant change, including when tickets
purchased are non-refundable.
It also plans to issue rules requiring detailed fee disclosure for
baggage, cancellation and family seating costs at time of purchase
and to issue final rules requiring passenger airlines to refund fees
for bags that are significantly delayed and refunds for services
like onboard Wi-Fi that do not work.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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