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American Airlines Makes It Harder to Remove Passengers for Body Odor or Attire



American Airlines has reportedly made it more difficult for flight attendants to remove passengers for what they wear or what they smell like. 

The changes come in the aftermath of an incident over the summer during which eight Black men were removed from a plane in Phoenix while they were waiting to depart for New York. The purported issue was a body odor complaint from a flight attendant. The eight men did not know one another and were not seated together. 

The removal prompted employee suspensions, a lawsuit from the affected passengers, charges of discrimination from the NAACP, and a review of policies at American.

According to what appear to be images of the airline’s revised in-flight manual posted at travel blog View from the Wing, the upshot is that American Airlines flight attendants are now only allowed to boot passengers who are a threat to safety or security. 

Otherwise, per the revised policy, concerns about stuff like B.O. should “originate from customers only,” meaning other passengers can complain about an issue related to a seatmate’s smell or wardrobe choices, but flight crews should look—and sniff?—the other way until a customer brings it up. 

What’s more, two flight attendants, rather than only one, should then “engage the customer” who raised the issue and try to resolve the matter without evicting people from their seats. 

If resolution can’t be achieved and the flight crew agrees to remove somebody from the plane, the aircraft’s captain should contact the appropriate officials at the airline and the flight attendants have to submit a report within 24 hours of the incident. 

“No matter the path,” reads the revised manual, “handling these types of issues with respect, discretion, care, and empathy is critical to the solution. How we make our customers feel and the perception we leave them with matters, and we all play an important role in that.”

View from the Wing’s Gary Leff writes that the policy change applies to removing passengers over attire as well. Since it’s hard to conceive of being underdressed as a safety or security threat, the decision to eject passengers for fashion crimes will no longer be at the discretion of a single American Airlines flight attendant. 

Frommer’s reached out to American Airlines to verify the revised policy and to seek comment, but we have not heard back as of this writing. 

The airline’s conditions of carriage still state that dressing inappropriately and emitting an offensive odor are legit reasons for getting evicted from a flight—conditions also set by American’s rivals, including Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue, and others.

American’s new policy doesn’t contravene those rules but does make them harder to enforce.