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Americans Are Giving The FAA An Earful About Plane Cabins

a group of people sitting in an airplane

It’s no secret that over the past 40 years or so, airlines have made plane seats more and more narrow, along with continually less space between rows. At the same time, Chris Q. Public has gotten larger, which makes squeezing into (and out of) these smaller seats that much more difficult and uncomfortable.

In 2018, Congress ordered the FAA to study the issue and set regulations on minimum seat sizes by 2019. The organization has been a little slow but is finally getting to business.

Earlier this year, they finally released the report on how long it took people to exit a plane in a mock emergency situation. They did all leave within the required 90 seconds, but to be honest, that’s probably to be expected, since they didn’t include any children, babies, senior citizens, disabled folks or people with pets in the study, even though chances are good that most, if not all of those demographics would be represented on a commercial plane on any given day.

The FAA is now getting public opinions on the topic.

The FAA invites comments on minimum seat dimensions necessary for passenger safety, especially during airplane evacuation, as the FAA examines whether new regulatory standards are necessary, in order to ensure such safety and comply with Section 577 of the Act. The FAA encourages commenters to review the CAMI report, and other materials in the docket, prior to commenting.

Comments should address whether, considering the existing regulatory requirements, one or more of the following seat dimensions  have or demonstrably could adversely affect the safety of air passengers by delaying the group egress time  of an emergency evacuation:

a. Seat width;
b. Seat pitch;
c. Seat length; and
d. Other seat dimensions.

Further, commenters are asked to provide information regarding the minimum seat dimensions necessary to ensure safety during airplane evacuation of a broad range of passengers, including those who were not included in the CAMI study including children, people over 60, and individuals with disabilities.

The FAA emphasizes that comments that include technical data and information will be the most helpful. The FAA is not requesting comments regarding matters unrelated to the agency’s determination under section 577, such as how the dimensions of passenger seats might relate to passenger comfort or convenience.

Note their specification: they are asking not how the dimensions of passenger seats might relate to passenger comfort or convenience; only about safety when having to evacuate during an emergency.

The agency officially opened the portal for the public’s feedback on August 3rd. They have close to 10,000 replies so far, and of the ones I read, Chris Q. Public has touched on how “too small seats could be dangerous in an emergency,” the vast majority are ALL ABOUT comfort. Because of the replies appear to be like these:

Fortunately, there were some responses that were spot on:

  • As a long time flyer with almost 3 million miles on Delta alone, I have been concerned for years about the impact of shrinking seat sizes and the space between rows of seats on emergency evacuation. I don’t believe the carefully staged evacuation tests with atypical participants is a good indicator of what is likely to happen in an actual airline emergency evacuation.I encourage the FAA to do a critical evaluation of this issue. – Roger S.
  • It’s a known fact that Americans have been getting taller and heavier. The U.S. also has one of the highest ratios of obesity on the planet. Americans are simply too big these days to easily negotiate in the space provided between the seats and many ‘spill’ over into the neighboring seats once they do manage to get seated.
    Here’s two quick items the government has hosted at the CDCl. They’re a little dated, so the average American is probably even heavier and wider now.
    Easy to see graph: https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5431a5.htm
    Really short article: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/04news/americans.htm
    Due to the populations increasing body size, seats realistically should have a width of at least 20″ and pitch of at least 36″ to facilitate freedom of movement during an emergency. The additional comfort is a bonus, but safety first. – John P.
  • I’m 56 years old and able-bodied, but I’ve travelled with my mother who is in her early 90s. The amount of space between rows would make it impossible for her to quickly exit any plane seat in economy. I understand that it’s important for airlines to make a profit, but the crowding in economy is, frankly, pretty terrifying. (Especially with COVID hanging around.) In an emergency – with people in a panicked state – even young, healthy people would have a hard time exiting an aircraft. For older people or those with disabilities (or children), the chances of safely exiting an airplane are almost nil. It would not take a tremendous amount of research money to create a study to identify how long it would take to clear a plane when, say, 20% of the plane is elderly, have disabilities or have children. I also understand that it’s expensive to retrofit planes, but any new planes should take into account that we have a growing, not diminishing, population of people living (even working!) well into their 70s and 80s now. Let’s start planning for a safer, more comfortable future for everyone. Stop squeezing more passengers into planes. Thanks for listening. – Butch B.
  • Commercial aircraft seat limitation are the basis – however, they are fundamentally wrong- as during Sanders 25 certification test – employees are being used
    to escape the aircraft simulating an emergency. Use -off the street people for same test and you get entirely different results. This is why people die as the amount of people on an aircraft -are only demonstrated by company personnel. Thus – the basis needs to change.
    2. UCLA study shows- people in various age groups gained roughly 4.5 pounds -during their adulthood from 1980 to 1990. The assumption is, that additional weight is added in subsequent years. Synonymous with weight gain is circumference of the waist . Consequently, a seat pitch of 30″ – 30 years ago- requires adjustment to between 31-31″ seat pitch today, whereas the width can probably stay of at least 19 inches.
    But seat width and seat pitch is also equal to money – the most expensive seat is an empty seat – from that premise – if you ever managed costs of an airline -you will place maximum allowable seats into the aircraft . It is therefore not safety rather the money you can make that dictates pitch and width. – Mike F.

The portal will be open until November 1st. You can also snail mail comments to the FAA:

Docket Operations, M-30
U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT)
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Room W12-140
West Building Ground Floor
Washington, DC 20590-0001

Or have them delivered by hand or courier:

Docket Operations in Room W12-140 of the West Building Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays

You can even fax them: (202) 493-2251

Will this help encourage the FAA to require wider seats with more legroom/pitch? Who knows; we can only hope.

Feature Photo: Pexels

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