The Congress wants a list of non-vol TSA just for unruly passengers: "Air rage epidemic"

The new law would allow the agency to keep travelers potentially risky outside theft.


It is not a secret that security is everyone's absolute priority on a flight. This is why in addition to the own series of rules of each airline, there are also regulations of the Transport Security Administration (TSA) established by the federal government which dictates everything, Security checkpoints Work on the items you can bring on board. Neglecting or breaking one of these protocols can land travelers in serious hot water, causing fines or even being arrested in some cases. But now, the Congress offers the creation of a new list of non-vol TSA only for passengers who become unruly on planes. Read the rest to see how legislators are trying to fight against the recent "Air Rage epidemic".

Read this then: 7 clothes to never wear thanks to the safety of the airport, say the experts .

The legislators offer a new type of non-theft list which would prevent unruly passengers from flights.

united states capitol building
Shutterstock / W. Scott McGill

On March 29, members of the US Senate and the House of Representatives declared that they introduced new legislation which would effectively allow the TSA to add passengers to a list of non-theft to become unruly during a flight. If it is adopted, the law on protection against abusive passengers would allow the Federal Agency to prohibit any person fine or condemned for attack or interfere with the crew of airlines to board a commercial flight, The Washington Post reports.

The proposed application program would be executed separately from the exclusion exclusion list without theft operated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which prohibits any person who is a terrorist known or suspected of climbing a plane . It would also extend the current informal system in which airlines can only prohibit a problematic passenger in their own flights and not another carrier. AE0FCC31AE342FD3A1346EBB1F342FCB

"Passengers must get on board and follow the rules and not commit acts of violence", senator Jack Rose said at a press conference announcing new legislation, by USA today . "This would grant the flexibility of the TSA to develop this list of non-theft and ensure that it is fair, transparent and includes a regular procedure and the possibility of call."

Flight incidents are still high compared to pre-pale levels.

Passengers on the airplane.
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The proposed legislation occurs while the incidents in flight has increased considerably in recent years. The federal mask mandates that were in place during the COVVI-19 pandemic coincided with a record number of abusive and unruly passengers in 2021. And although incidents have decreased slightly since last year, the number of cases under survey under investigation by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is always 470% higher that in 2019, reports Axios.

"The mask mandates have ended. However, the air rage epidemic continues and this high level of violence in flight must stop," said Reed in his declaration. "We have to do more to protect employees and the itinerant public."

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The bill seems to have a lot of support from the air transport industry.

A flight attendant walking down the aisle of a plane checking on passengers
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In addition to creating disorders on board, meetings with unruly or violent passengers have led to serious injuries to the crew members of airlines. To help assert their cause, representatives of three major airlines joined the legislators when they announce to describe their experiences.

In an incident, a on -board agent for American Airlines described a meeting in which a passenger launched insults before spitting and hitting him, which led to a black butter eye. And the southwest edge agent Jennifer Vitalo told journalists how she was so seriously attacked on a plane that she was hospitalized for more than a week and did not return to her work for more than a year, The post office reports.

"We deserve to go to work and go home in the same form as we were when we got there," said Vitalo. "So this legislation helps us to be able to do that exactly."

A similar bill did not succeed in Congress last year.

Security guard with face mask in front of airplane
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This is not the first time that the legislators and the air industry have been trying to Catchet up consequences For unruly or abusive behavior on flights. Last year, the CEO of Delta Air Lines Ed Bastian wrote a letter to the American prosecutor general Merrick Garland Ask that the Ministry of Justice (DoJ) creates a list of non-theft for problematic passengers, USA today reported. At the time, he wrote that the program "will help prevent future incidents and serve as a strong symbol of the consequences of not complying with the instructions of crew members on commercial aircraft".

Months later, the same group of Bipartisan legislators involved in the last legislation proposed a similar law which "would stiffen the sanctions" for passengers condemned for Assault of the flight crew . However, the bill was not voted in law, The post office reports.

Although the new legislation allows reasons for the first flight prohibitions on the scale of the industry, there are still consequences to act on a plane. Currently, FAA fines for passenger violations can reach $ 37,000 per offense, Axios reports.


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