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Flying with kids is already a guaranteed wild ride, but when the airline seems determined to turn your trip into an episode of Survivor, you’ve got turbulence even before the plane takes off ...
The U.S. Department of Transportation is proposing a new rule that would ban airlines from charging parents more to sit with their young children. Under the proposal, released Thursday, U.S. and ...
White House officials say their “fee-free family seating” proposal could potentially save parents up to $200 per round trip flight.
The U.S. Department of Transportation is proposing a new rule that would ban airlines from charging parents more to sit with their young children. Under the proposal, released Thursday, U.S. and foreign carriers would be required to seat children ages 13 or younger next to a parent or accompanying adult for free.
Under the proposal, released Thursday, U.S. and foreign carriers would be required to seat children 13 or younger next to their parent or accompanying adult for free. If adjacent seats aren’t available when a parent books a flight, airlines would be required to let families choose between a full refund, or waiting to see if a seat opens up.
A steward informed him that "it was the airline's policy that only women were allowed to sit next to unaccompanied children". [7] Wolsay stated that he felt that the policy was "totally discriminatory", and the New Zealand Herald suggested to the airline that the policy implied "[Qantas] considered male passengers to be dangerous to children."
The airline typically charges for seat selection but is working to have adjacent seats automatically assigned at no extra cost for children under 14 and one guardian in their group.
But the Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 incident earlier this month — in which the since-grounded Boeing 737 Max 9’s cabin door plug detached midair, causing what the airline called a “rapid ...