Fight or Flight: Unruly Passengers Have Made Flying Downright Scary

By: John Donovan
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Back in the 1960s, the Chicago-based Leo Burnett Agency dreamed up an advertising slogan designed to ease unrest in an historically turbulent era. “Come fly the friendly skies of United” became an industry catchphrase, evoking images of smiling stewardesses, clean-cut pilots and a flying experience that made a trip from Chicago to Los Angeles as easy as heating up a TV dinner.

Those friendly skies, though, are now as anachronistic as that foil-wrapped Swanson dinner and that brand-new high-fidelity RCA. A post-pandemic travel surge, an industry workforce stretched to its limit, mask mandates, politics and general pent-up anger all have contributed to an unprecedented number of onboard showdowns between rowdy passengers and flight attendants.

It’s beyond unfriendly up there these days. It can be downright scary.

“This is the worst unruly passenger situation that flight attendants have seen throughout their entire careers,” says Taylor Garland, a representative for the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, which represents almost 50,000 flight attendants at 17 airlines, including United Airlines, Alaska Airlines, Spirit Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines. “When you put a microcosm of the U.S. population in a metal tube flying at 30,000 feet [9,144 meters], one small little problem can turn into a very big problem very quickly.”

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Back in January, with the COVID-19 pandemic still raging, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) administrator Steve Dickson signed a “zero tolerance” order that called for stricter penalties for passengers “who assault, threaten, intimidate, or interfere with a crewmember in the performance of a crewmember’s duties.” In March, the order was extended for at least as long as the federal mask mandate remains in place.

The federal mask mandate requires that most travelers in all transportation networks — including at airports, on planes and on busses — wear masks. It lasts through Sept. 13.

“The primary reason why the mask mandate is still in place is because not everyone on our planes is vaccinated. Not even everyone has access to the vaccine, right?” Garland explains. “So it’s protecting every single person onboard. And, also, transportation has a responsibility to make sure we’re not contributing to the spread of any [coronavirus] variants or things like that.”

Dickson’s zero-tolerance stance was prompted by more than 3,000 reports of disruptive passengers, just since the start of the year. The in-air incidents are disturbing:

The TSA has become so concerned about the incidents, it announced June 24 it was reinstating it Crew Member Self-Defense (CMSD) training in July. The program was paused because of restrictions.

The training, which is voluntary and free for all flight crew members in the United States, provides them with defensive techniques for responding to an attacker on an aircraft. Flight crew members also learn to identify and deter potential threats, and if needed, apply the self-defense techniques against attackers.

A group of airlines stakeholders, including several unions representing pilots and flight attendants, recently sent U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland a letter demanding more be done to deal with rowdy passengers, including the “full and public prosecution of onboard acts of violence.” Some 465 investigations into assault or threats of assault on crewmembers are ongoing.

“It is worse than anything we’ve ever seen, and the FAA’s numbers back that up,” Garland says.

“It’s out of control,” Paul Hartshorn, a spokesman for the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, which represents American Airlines cabin crew members, told CNBC in early June. “It’s really coming to the point where we have to defend ourselves.”

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The reasons behind the anger and violence in the skies can be traced directly to the problems America faces on the ground. “It’s people coming out of the pandemic and being at a stress level 10 over the last 15 months,” Garland says. “Tensions are just really high.”

In hindsight, we probably shouldn’t be surprised. Instead of smiling stewardesses serving coffee and fluffing pillows on leisurely cross-country trips, you now have overworked flight attendants who are being asked — among many other critically important tasks that involve the safety of every passenger on board — to enforce a mask mandate against many people’s wishes. All this on cramped airplanes filled with antsy passengers during a pandemic that has not yet ended.

Is the FAA’s crackdown enough to calm things, though?

“We would say it should be permanent,” Garland says of the zero-tolerance policy. “[It] is helpful, and all of the reporting on the fines and the possible consequences that you may face as a passenger if you act up is definitely serving as a deterrent for some people. Obviously, not for everyone. But it is helpful.”

The FAA and others have launched public address announcements in airports throughout the country that warn of fines and possible criminal prosecutions for those who might disrupt air travel. Several airlines offer up onboard messages as well.

With the FAA’s actions, and with mask mandates on the ground being relaxed throughout the country, there is some hope that things between flight attendants and passengers may finally chill out a little.

Right now, though, when it comes to flying carefree, friendly skies, that’s all we have: hope.

Perhaps the strangest ever case of air rage happened in October 1995 on a flight from Buenos Aires to New York. An investment banker named Gerard Finneran, apparently highly intoxicated and upset after flight attendants refused to serve him more drinks, threatened at least two cabin members, poured alcohol on himself, then walked into the first-class compartment and defecated on a food-service cart. He pled guilty to one misdemeanor count of threatening and paid more than $50,000 in clean-up costs and airfare reimbursement to his fellow passengers.

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