Uncategorized

Airline’s controversial fine for this common plane habit

Feeling impatient to get off the plane the very second it touches down? Well, Turkey has just put a price on it.

As much as it is an enjoyable experience, traveling by plane can also be rather annoying, and if you’ve had your fair share of traveling you know exactly why. It’s not just the people rushing to get their flights, the long queues, and the pressure of flying itself, but also the aisle rushers who are up the moment the wheels hit the tarmac, yank their bags from the overhead bin, and rush to get to the exit before everyone else, can also ruin the experience.

Turkey, however, seems to be putting a stop to such behavior.

The country’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), led by Kemal Yüksek, has issued a directive to cabin crews: Passengers who ignore disembarkation rules by standing before the plane has fully stopped, opening overhead compartments, crowding the aisle, or moving before it’s their row’s turn, will now face official fines.

Pexels

Flight crews have been instructed to report anyone who gets up before the seatbelt sign is turned off, and authorities could impose administrative penalties of up to 2,603 Turkish lira (around $67) under Turkey’s aviation regulations for passengers who don’t comply to these rules, as reported by The Washington Post. The warning aims to enforce orderly disembarkation and ensure passengers respect the priority of those seated ahead or nearby.

“Please do not unfasten your seatbelt, stand up, or open the overhead compartments until the seatbelt sign has been switched off,” the notice said.

“Passengers who do not comply with the rules will be reported to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation through a Disruptive Passenger Report, and an administrative fine will be imposed in accordance with the applicable legal regulations,” the airline now announced, according to The Sun.

Pexels

According to Yüksek, this comes after the increased number of complaints from passengers who in fact respect the rules. Further, they added that this kind of behavior risks “passenger and baggage safety and security” and disregards “the satisfaction and exit priority” of other passengers.

If you are planning on traveling to Turkey any time soon, make sure you stay bucked, seated, and patient until you are given green light to leave the plane.

We should wait and see if other countries will follow the same.

Please SHARE this article with your family and friends on Facebook.

Bored Daddy

Love and Peace

Related Posts

She Had No Name For 40 Years: How Rea Rasmussen Was Found In A Barrel — And Her Father Was Already A Killer

It is November 10, 1985. A hunter is moving through the woods on the edge of Bear Brook State Park in Allenstown, New Hampshire. The trees are bare….

The FBI Handed a 73-Year-Old Grandmother a Piece of Paper. She Had 3 Minutes to Call 911 — She Called Her Son Instead.

8:47 A.M. April 26, 2016. Miami, Florida. Donna Adelson steps out of her luxury condo, coffee in hand. The Florida sun is warm. The street is quiet. Just…

She Said She Loved Him. The State Said She Killed Him. What Really Happened to John O’Keefe That Snowy Night?

It is 6:02 a.m. on January 29, 2022. Canton, Massachusetts. The temperature has dropped to nine degrees. Fourteen inches of snow have buried every street, every yard, every…

For 53 years, the boy under the bridge had no name. DNA finally gave Carl Bryant his back.

On June 13, 1972, a little boy was found dead in Massey Creek under the Old Colchester Road Bridge in Lorton, Virginia. More than five decades later, genetic…

The True Story of Steven Stayner, the Boy America Couldn’t Forget

A Tuesday Afternoon in December It is 3:15 in the afternoon on December 4th, 1972. Kay Stayner is folding laundry in a house on Bette Street in Merced,…

How a tragic plane crash shaped a comedy star

Stephen Colbert’s life has been a long negotiation with grief. The plane crash that killed his father and brothers didn’t just take his family; it shattered his sense…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *