Link: https://apnews.com/b97804ab19cf42a4...o-hot-aboard-an-airliner?-The-law-doesn't-say
July 14, 2017
Every day, tens of thousands of U.S. airline passengers settle into their seats, lower the window shades and reach up to twist the air vents without the benefit of something that might do even more to keep them cool: a rule setting temperature limits inside the cabin.
Airlines have their own guidelines some allowing the mercury to hit 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) and federal regulations cover air flow and, more generally, passenger safety and comfort.
But nowhere do authorities say how hot is too hot when a plane is sitting on the ground a fact illustrated this summer when a mother holding her beet-red infant had to plead to be let off a broiling regional jet stuck on the tarmac at Denver International Airport.
Emily France said she and her 4-month-old son, Owen, sweltered aboard the 50-seat oven with wings for more than an hour June 22 before it returned to the gate and passengers were allowed off briefly.
When they re-boarded the United Airlines flight to El Paso, Texas, the cabin felt even warmer, France said. With the flight delayed again, she stripped off Owens clothing and applied ice bags brought by flight attendants, but his condition deteriorated.
I heard a cry from my son that I have never heard before, and his skin looked a color that I had never seen before, and I knew he was in trouble, she said. Then he just stopped crying. And he went limp in my arms.
I said, Get an ambulance and get me off the plane, she recalled.
She and the boy were taken away by ambulance. Doctors determined the baby suffered no lasting effects.
France said she hopes federal regulators take note, and she has hired a lawyer who specializes in airline safety law. He is demanding an explanation.
There is no reason why heat bad enough to cause people to pass out is happening in cabins, said the attorney, David Rapoport.
The 50,000-member Association of Flight Attendants has been lobbying Congress for years to set a maximum cabin temperature of 80 degrees (27 Celsius).
Bottom line, the airlines and regulators do not consider temperature to be a safety issue, union spokeswoman Taylor Garland said. Therefore, its low on the list of priorities when it comes to on-time departures.
United, which was hit with bad publicity three months ago when a passenger was dragged off an overcrowded flight in Chicago, apologized to the babys mother but had no explanation of what went wrong.
This should never have happened, United spokeswoman Maggie Schmerin said. We are profoundly sorry to our customer and her child for the experience they endured. We are actively looking into what happened to prevent this from occurring again.