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Southwest attendants can leave planes during stops, FAA says
Decision allows attendants to escort kids, people in wheelchairs
By BLOOMBERG NEWS
Southwest Airlines won U.S. permission to keep letting flight attendants leave planes to perform other duties as jets load and unload, helping the carrier avoid cost increases.
Attendants can do work such as escorting children and helping travelers in wheelchairs between connecting flights, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The decision reversed an FAA manager’s April 2006 directive that all three attendants on each flight had to stay on board.
American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, US Airways and AirTran backed Southwest’s request, saying they wanted to adopt the practice. Southwest said in September its attendants continued to leave their planes while it appealed the FAA’s initial decision.
Southwest, the largest U.S. low-fare airline, wants to keep its jets’ average stay at gates between flights at 25 minutes, a key to the company’s profit. Losing the appeal would have lengthened ground times, raised costs and required higher fares, the Dallas-based carrier said.
Two attendants would be able to leave the plane while passengers exit, and one could be away during boarding, under the FAA decision posted July 6 in Washington.
Decision allows attendants to escort kids, people in wheelchairs
By BLOOMBERG NEWS
Southwest Airlines won U.S. permission to keep letting flight attendants leave planes to perform other duties as jets load and unload, helping the carrier avoid cost increases.
Attendants can do work such as escorting children and helping travelers in wheelchairs between connecting flights, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The decision reversed an FAA manager’s April 2006 directive that all three attendants on each flight had to stay on board.
American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, US Airways and AirTran backed Southwest’s request, saying they wanted to adopt the practice. Southwest said in September its attendants continued to leave their planes while it appealed the FAA’s initial decision.
Southwest, the largest U.S. low-fare airline, wants to keep its jets’ average stay at gates between flights at 25 minutes, a key to the company’s profit. Losing the appeal would have lengthened ground times, raised costs and required higher fares, the Dallas-based carrier said.
Two attendants would be able to leave the plane while passengers exit, and one could be away during boarding, under the FAA decision posted July 6 in Washington.