AS Requires Passengers to Wear Face Masks (TSA Extends to 1/18/2022)
#92
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Window Seat
Programs: National Executive, HHonors Gold, IHG Platinum, Hyatt Visitor
Posts: 2,495
Not sure whether AS will follow competition and penalizing passengers not following Mask requirement, but am hopeful they do.
I had to deal with a defiant passenger going through TSA, and causing a commotion, "Oh, look, you'll have to tolerate 20 seconds near me without my mask on" He was clearly making people around him uncomfortable....
Jiburi
I had to deal with a defiant passenger going through TSA, and causing a commotion, "Oh, look, you'll have to tolerate 20 seconds near me without my mask on" He was clearly making people around him uncomfortable....
Jiburi
#93
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: SFO
Programs: AS 75K (OW), SK Silver (*A), UR, MR
Posts: 3,347
https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-str...ht-11592400726
But it would be comforting to know that the staff enforces the mask policy at all times and the airline bans passengers who don’t comply.
And I wouldn’t mind if the policy included keeping talking to a minimum.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/14/h...nfections.html
#94
Join Date: May 2008
Location: "the world is my country"
Programs: Alaska 100K (aka OWS)
Posts: 811
I don’t see Alaska mentioned here.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-str...ht-11592400726
But it would be comforting to know that the staff enforces the mask policy at all times and the airline bans passengers who don’t comply.
And I wouldn’t mind if the policy included keeping talking to a minimum.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/14/h...nfections.html
https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-str...ht-11592400726
But it would be comforting to know that the staff enforces the mask policy at all times and the airline bans passengers who don’t comply.
And I wouldn’t mind if the policy included keeping talking to a minimum.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/14/h...nfections.html
#95
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: Seattle
Programs: AS
Posts: 2,293
With masks becoming mandatory in Washington State, should help matters at SEATAC. Masks already mandatory in California.
Up in the air, seems like a crap shoot. This is why the distancing is more important to me.
Up in the air, seems like a crap shoot. This is why the distancing is more important to me.
#96
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: FCA
Programs: Hilton Diamond, Alaska MVP Gold
Posts: 926
Seattle Times front page article: Airlines, passengers grappling with coronavirus safety policies
Like masks or not, not great publicity for Alaska.
Issaquah resident Ashley Musta said her first airline journey since the coronavirus pandemic struck will likely be her last for some time.
Musta, 32, was left unnerved by an Alaska Airlines flight she took from Phoenix to Seattle on Thursday afternoon in which she said social distancing and other coronavirus safety measures were ignored.
Musta, 32, was left unnerved by an Alaska Airlines flight she took from Phoenix to Seattle on Thursday afternoon in which she said social distancing and other coronavirus safety measures were ignored.
#97
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Window Seat
Programs: National Executive, HHonors Gold, IHG Platinum, Hyatt Visitor
Posts: 2,495
Seattle Times front page article: Airlines, passengers grappling with coronavirus safety policiesLike masks or not, not great publicity for Alaska.
It looks like what has to happen in these planes to please the folks who are in the mask camp and ease everyone's concerns over the virus, is no eating, no drinking, and no talking. Talking appears to be a risk now based on the reports we are hearing like that birthday party in TX where 18 people contracted Coronavirus. None had masks and it would be interesting to know if masks would have helped them. Who knows. But whatever. Masks must be on at all times if we actually want to be serious about stopping the spread of Coronavirus and there needs to no longer be any excuse to have them off. If there are excuses for taking the mask on/off then the benefit of having the mask at all is being diluted. There is in reality no mask requirement. All you have to do is "eat or drink" and that is your get out of wearing the mask card.
Flying etiquette is in for some major changes going forward.
Originally Posted by Link to Seattle Times front page article: [url=https://www.seattletimes.com/business/airlines-passengers-grappling-over-coronavirus-safety-policies/
Airlines, passengers grappling with coronavirus safety policiesLike masks or not, not great publicity for Alaska.
“I would say half of the first-class cabin was not wearing their masks,” Musta said. “People in the rows nearby me were not wearing them, talking with them off.”
Musta couldn’t remember if flight attendants asked passengers to put on masks on Thursday. But just a few rows ahead of her, in the first-class cabin, Tiffany Fetters, 47, of Capitol Hill saw the cabin’s male flight attendant ask a couple directly behind her to wear theirs several times.
She said he told them: “If you don’t do it for you, do it for your grandmother,” but after they didn’t listen, he confided to her there wasn’t more he could do.
Willamette University law student Brittany Gerst, 25, felt the same way last Wednesday on an Alaska flight from Orlando, Florida, to Seattle with her 13-year-old sister-in-law. “Nobody was wearing masks,” she said.
“I would say half of the first-class cabin was not wearing their masks,” Musta said. “People in the rows nearby me were not wearing them, talking with them off.”
Musta couldn’t remember if flight attendants asked passengers to put on masks on Thursday. But just a few rows ahead of her, in the first-class cabin, Tiffany Fetters, 47, of Capitol Hill saw the cabin’s male flight attendant ask a couple directly behind her to wear theirs several times.
She said he told them: “If you don’t do it for you, do it for your grandmother,” but after they didn’t listen, he confided to her there wasn’t more he could do.
Willamette University law student Brittany Gerst, 25, felt the same way last Wednesday on an Alaska flight from Orlando, Florida, to Seattle with her 13-year-old sister-in-law. “Nobody was wearing masks,” she said.
Last edited by storewanderer; Jun 25, 2020 at 12:57 pm
#98
Join Date: Aug 2018
Programs: AA Exec Plat, Bonvoy Platinum, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 621
Seattle Times front page article: Airlines, passengers grappling with coronavirus safety policiesLike masks or not, not great publicity for Alaska.
#99
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Seattle
Programs: AS MM, MVPGold100k, Hilton Diamond, Hertz Presidents Circle
Posts: 1,475
Yesterday, at both airports (SEA and PDX) FAs walked around the gate area reminding passengers that the airport requires all persons to wear face coverings or masks to those that were not obviously eating. At PDX the seats down at the far end of C had signs on various seats saying do not use to maintain social distancing. On the PDX SEA leg there were a lot of airline crew passengers, all wore masks the entire flight. Both flights were noticeable quiet, the only noise was from toddlers traveling with mommy. It is almost becoming a thing to see someone without a mask on. You can see a lot of folks wearing the masks at their necks, or just covering the mouth, leaving the nose free. Wonder what is spread out from a neck?
#100
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Washington DC
Posts: 1,357
Can a state law (or a Governor's executive order) extend to interstate flights?
While the feds don't regulate alcohol consumption, so that the states can require individual state liquor licenses for airlines serving that state, I wonder if principles of federal law pre-emption would preclude state executive orders from being enforced on interstate flights? If on a flight from California to State X (where State X does not require masks), can people take off their masks once the plane crosses the California state line?
While the feds don't regulate alcohol consumption, so that the states can require individual state liquor licenses for airlines serving that state, I wonder if principles of federal law pre-emption would preclude state executive orders from being enforced on interstate flights? If on a flight from California to State X (where State X does not require masks), can people take off their masks once the plane crosses the California state line?
#101
Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: On a plane or a beach
Programs: Yes
Posts: 3,152
Can a state law (or a Governor's executive order) extend to interstate flights?
While the feds don't regulate alcohol consumption, so that the states can require individual state liquor licenses for airlines serving that state, I wonder if principles of federal law pre-emption would preclude state executive orders from being enforced on interstate flights? If on a flight from California to State X (where State X does not require masks), can people take off their masks once the plane crosses the California state line?
While the feds don't regulate alcohol consumption, so that the states can require individual state liquor licenses for airlines serving that state, I wonder if principles of federal law pre-emption would preclude state executive orders from being enforced on interstate flights? If on a flight from California to State X (where State X does not require masks), can people take off their masks once the plane crosses the California state line?
#102
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: SFO
Programs: AS 75K (OW), SK Silver (*A), UR, MR
Posts: 3,347
"In a shared mission, multiple airlines announced they will force passengers to wear face masks while flying, with penalties for non-compliance include being barred from future travel with the carrier."
https://www.flyertalk.com/articles/l...&utm_campaign=
I am also under the impression that a county can always go stricter, but not looser, than the state it's in.
#103
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Window Seat
Programs: National Executive, HHonors Gold, IHG Platinum, Hyatt Visitor
Posts: 2,495
Can a state law (or a Governor's executive order) extend to interstate flights?
While the feds don't regulate alcohol consumption, so that the states can require individual state liquor licenses for airlines serving that state, I wonder if principles of federal law pre-emption would preclude state executive orders from being enforced on interstate flights? If on a flight from California to State X (where State X does not require masks), can people take off their masks once the plane crosses the California state line?
While the feds don't regulate alcohol consumption, so that the states can require individual state liquor licenses for airlines serving that state, I wonder if principles of federal law pre-emption would preclude state executive orders from being enforced on interstate flights? If on a flight from California to State X (where State X does not require masks), can people take off their masks once the plane crosses the California state line?
Many airports are requiring masks in the airport now too, some in conjunction with state or county rules, some just took it upon themselves to require masks given the airports are a large public area. It is pretty simple at this point if you are doing air travel: put the mask on before you enter the airport to depart, and don't plan on taking it off until you exit the terminal at your destination.
#104
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jul 1999
Location: Over the Bay Bridge, CA
Programs: Jumbo mas
Posts: 38,635
That is state-specific. Some governors have preempted the ability of a local government to have a more restrictive requirement than the statewide requirement..
#105
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: British Columbia
Programs: AS MVPG100K, Marriott Marriott Titanium Elite, Hilton Gold
Posts: 7,263