US airlines may start weighing passengers
Airline passengers in the US may be weighed at boarding gates, according to a report. Aircraft are required to ensure a safe weight before taking off and factor in averages for passengers and crew, as well as cargo and fuel. According to a circular advisory from the FAA attracting attention in recent days, airlines could be asked to start updating average airline passenger weight to account for increases in the average weight of American adults. An airline blog, View from the Wing, wrote that “the FAA realises that passenger weight can vary by route and airlines may want to document this difference... Standard weights may not be appropriate for smaller planes, with smaller sample size and greater likelihood of variance from average.” The weighing of passengers, according to the FAA, would set "standard average passenger weights" for crew members, baggage and passengers every 36 months. AirInsight, also reporting on the FAA advisory added that surveying would be random and voluntary, with passengers able to refuse. "Regardless of the sampling method used, an operator has the option of surveying each passenger and bag aboard the aircraft and should give a passenger the right to decline to participate in any passenger or weight survey," the FFA advisory wrote. “If a passenger declines to participate, the operator should select the next passenger based on the operator’s random selection method rather than select the next passenger in a line.”<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2021-05-19/general/us-airlines-may-start-weighing-passengers
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/logo.png
US airlines may start weighing passengers
Airline passengers in the US may be weighed at boarding gates, according to a report. Aircraft are required to ensure a safe weight before taking off and factor in averages for passengers and crew, as well as cargo and fuel. According to a circular advisory from the FAA attracting attention in recent days, airlines could be asked to start updating average airline passenger weight to account for increases in the average weight of American adults. An airline blog, View from the Wing, wrote that “the FAA realises that passenger weight can vary by route and airlines may want to document this difference... Standard weights may not be appropriate for smaller planes, with smaller sample size and greater likelihood of variance from average.” The weighing of passengers, according to the FAA, would set "standard average passenger weights" for crew members, baggage and passengers every 36 months. AirInsight, also reporting on the FAA advisory added that surveying would be random and voluntary, with passengers able to refuse. "Regardless of the sampling method used, an operator has the option of surveying each passenger and bag aboard the aircraft and should give a passenger the right to decline to participate in any passenger or weight survey," the FFA advisory wrote. “If a passenger declines to participate, the operator should select the next passenger based on the operator’s random selection method rather than select the next passenger in a line.”<br/>