Airline passengers hoping for a little more leg room or space on plane seats can tell the federal government how they feel for the next 90 days. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is asking for ...
Travelers' displeasure with cramped airplane seating has been rising as planes pack in more seats. Sponsored by Sens. Baldwin and Duckworth, the EVAC Act aims to make airplanes more accessible and ...
ROCHESTER, N.Y. – Think back to the last time you were on a plane in coach. How comfortable was that seat? If you didn’t like the size or the leg room, now is your chance to complain directly to the ...
That's how a federal judge in Washington D.C., Patricia Millet, described the issue in a decision she and two other judges handed down Friday, ordering the Federal Aviation Administration to review ...
Two Senate Democrats want the Biden administration to take another look at whether airplane seats are too cramped. The pressure – in the form of legislation from Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Tammy ...
Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth introduced a bill on Thursday that would require the Federal Aviation Administration to rethink how it tests airline seat sizes. The proposed legislation, called the ...
WASHINGTON — “This is the case of the incredible shrinking airline seat.” That’s how a federal judge in Washington D.C., Patricia Millet, described the issue in a decision she and two other judges ...
If you think airplane seats are too small, this is your chance to speak your mind. The U.S. Congress is directing the FAA to establish minimum dimensions for airplane seats. It's not your imagination, ...
You only have a few more days to let the Federal Aviation Administration hear your thoughts about the size of seats on airplanes. Over the summer, the agency announced it was considering establishing ...
A standard seat size could make planes more comfortable -- and more safe. Airline passengers hoping for a little more leg room or space on plane seats can tell the federal government how they feel for ...
"This is the case of the incredible shrinking airline seat." That's how a federal judge in Washington D.C., Patricia Millet, described the issue in a decision she and two other judges handed down ...
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