In July, the federal Office of Aviation Consumer Protection issued a notice urging U.S. airlines to "do everything in their power" to keep children 13 and younger near their parents when flying at no added cost.
Earlier this summer, the Office of Aviation Consumer Protection issued a notice urging U.S. airlines to “do everything in their power” to keep children 13 and younger near their parents
Earlier this summer, the Office of Aviation Consumer Protection issued a notice urging U.S. airlines to “do everything in their power” to keep children 13 and younger near their parents when flying. The office will begin to review all airline policies and consumer complaints four months after the notice is
737 MAX returning to passenger service in Sacramento. Wary flyers can avoid it, though
Sacramento Bee 2/4/2021 Tony Bizjak, The Sacramento Bee
Feb. 4 The 737 MAX aircraft is returning to passenger service in the United States, including in Sacramento in the coming days, nearly two years after being grounded in the wake of back-to-back fatal crashes blamed on botched software.
United Airlines will be the first to fly the jet in the West, beginning on Feb. 11, identifying Sacramento as one of the airports to be used by the MAX jets, which have been retrofitted and were re-certified for commercial flights in November by the Federal Aviation Administration.