Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2015 12:49 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada's transport minister quietly wrote to the heads of every major airline in the country earlier this year to try and stamp out a practice where parents were being seated separately from their children on flights.
     
    In the March letter, Lisa Raitt called the issue one "where logic should prevail" and encouraged the airlines to ensure parents were seated with their young children whenever possible.
     
    She asked the airlines to come up with some way to eliminate such incidents, provide "greater predictability" to parents and "minimize the challenges that parents face when they embark on air travel with children."
     
    A briefing note accompanying the letter suggests the missive wasn't intended to signal that the federal government was going to legislate an end to the practice by airlines, but to promote what Raitt's officials called "an industry-led solution to avoid such situations."
     
    Still, Transport Canada officials wrote in the briefing note that they were "exploring opportunities to address this issue and input from air carriers would be useful in that regard."
     
    A copy of the letter and briefing note were obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.
     
    There are no federal rules requiring parents to be seated next to their children on flights, nor is it a guarantee under airline policy that a parent or guardian will automatically get a seat next to children under age 12.
     
    In dismissing a complaint against six airlines, the Canadian Transport Agency ruled late last year that ticketing rules that don't guarantee adjoining seats for parents and their children were neither unreasonable nor discriminatory.
     
    The problem may be a result of how passengers can select their seats.
     
    Some airlines charge a seat-selection fee on lower-fare tickets at the time of purchase — a practice "typical of an industry where margins are thin" and carriers are looking for extra revenue without raising ticket prices, the briefing note says.
     
    Some passengers may not pay the fee, instead hoping to pick their seats when they check in, putting them in competition with other passengers in the "first-come, first-served" race for seats, the note says.
     
    Air Canada, Porter, WestJet and Sunwing all said their existing policies have worked well to limit the number of times parents are seated separately from their children.
     
    Sunwing, for instance, holds back a "certain number of seats" so that minors can sit adjacent to their parents during flights. WestJet said 96 per cent of children under 12 booked on its flights end up sitting with their parents.
     
    If families are seated in different spots, the airlines said crew members look for open seats and ask other passengers to voluntarily relocate so that families can stay together on flights.
     
    "The airlines try to accommodate parents and children when embarking, but that entirely depends on other passengers' willingness to accommodate the parents and children," said John McKenna, president and CEO of the Air Transport Association of Canada, which represents many smaller carriers.
     
    "Not very many people are willing to give up either an aisle or window seat for a middle seat."
     
    McKenna said there was a "regulatory or legislative solution" to the issue. Parents, he said, should either book as early as possible when there are more seats available on a flight, or pay a seat-selection fee.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Arrested After Pattullo Bridge Crash That Damaged 30 Vehicles. PICS

    Woman Arrested After Pattullo Bridge Crash That Damaged 30 Vehicles. PICS
    A northbound car crossing the Pattullo Bridge in New Westminster, B.C., straddled the centre line and began driving over pylon dividers just before 6:30 p.m. on Thursday

    Woman Arrested After Pattullo Bridge Crash That Damaged 30 Vehicles. PICS

    B.C. Man Rylan Sandberg, 46, Admits To Possession Of Child Porn In Canada-Wide Bust

    B.C. Man Rylan Sandberg, 46, Admits To Possession Of Child Porn In Canada-Wide Bust
    Forty-six-year-old Rylan Sandberg pleaded guilty to possession of child porn in May.

    B.C. Man Rylan Sandberg, 46, Admits To Possession Of Child Porn In Canada-Wide Bust

    After 24 Pellet Gun Attacks, Abbotsford Police Arrest One, Search For Second Suspect

    After 24 Pellet Gun Attacks, Abbotsford Police Arrest One, Search For Second Suspect
    Police credit the observant cyclist with helping crack the case, by providing video of a hand sticking out the window of a 2006 dark blue Chrysler Sebring.

    After 24 Pellet Gun Attacks, Abbotsford Police Arrest One, Search For Second Suspect

    Saskatchewan Man, 24, Dies While Swimming In B.C.'s Shuswap Lake

    Saskatchewan Man, 24, Dies While Swimming In B.C.'s Shuswap Lake
    The service says Scott Kevin Glen was staying with friends on a rental houseboat moored at a marina near Sicamous, in B.C.'s Interior.

    Saskatchewan Man, 24, Dies While Swimming In B.C.'s Shuswap Lake

    Vancouver ESL Tutor, 70, Arrested For Sexual Interference Of 12-Year-Old Girl

    Vancouver ESL Tutor, 70, Arrested For Sexual Interference Of 12-Year-Old Girl
    Christopher Jon Adams was hired to tutor a girl after she arrived in Canada in 2013 and that an investigation began after allegations he may have touched the child for sexual purposes

    Vancouver ESL Tutor, 70, Arrested For Sexual Interference Of 12-Year-Old Girl

    Nurses Union, B.C. Government Invest Millions To Prevent Health-Care Assaults

    VANCOUVER — A string of assaults against health care workers has prompted the B.C. Nurses' Union and the provincial government to invest $2 million in violence prevention at four high-risk hospitals.

    Nurses Union, B.C. Government Invest Millions To Prevent Health-Care Assaults