ozbeachbabe
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2009
- Posts
- 6,459
About 20 years ago a 2nd cousin of mine was in a motorbike accident & had to have a skin graft which required her leg to be kept straight on her SYD/MEL flight with AN.
What AN did for her was charge a fare & the ticket was made out in the name of "leg support". The fare was 50% off the full economy fare which equalled a child fare as this was when the 2 airline agreement was in place ie pre deregulation.
The window seat in front of her was folded down enabling her to stretch out the leg as per medical advice.
It was also AN policy that if the flight was not full, the pax would receive a refund for the leg support ticket. The flight wasn't full & she did receive a refund so the end result was that she got two seats for the price of one.
I don't see why airlines could not offer this facility & charge people for a seat in the name of "personal comfort" for whatever reason whether they be large in stature, claustrophobic or for whatever the reason may be. With fare structures the way they are now ie domestically everyone pays the same fare & no discount for kids the cost of the "personal comfort" seat should be the same price as what the pax is paying for their seat.
Internationally it could be the same price as the applicable child fare if children pay 67% or 75% of the airfare.
The airline could refund the personal comfort ticket if it was not a full flight which would encourage more people to buy a seat rather than avoid it thereby making someone else's trip hell. It would probably wise to ensure the larger person was in an aisle seat eg a 'D' or a 'G' seat if on a B747 or A380 with the 'E' or 'F' inner seat block so they don't have to climb over someone or have someone climb over them. It would also be a safety issue as they would not be blocking anyone from getting out of their seat in the event of emergency.
What AN did for her was charge a fare & the ticket was made out in the name of "leg support". The fare was 50% off the full economy fare which equalled a child fare as this was when the 2 airline agreement was in place ie pre deregulation.
The window seat in front of her was folded down enabling her to stretch out the leg as per medical advice.
It was also AN policy that if the flight was not full, the pax would receive a refund for the leg support ticket. The flight wasn't full & she did receive a refund so the end result was that she got two seats for the price of one.
I don't see why airlines could not offer this facility & charge people for a seat in the name of "personal comfort" for whatever reason whether they be large in stature, claustrophobic or for whatever the reason may be. With fare structures the way they are now ie domestically everyone pays the same fare & no discount for kids the cost of the "personal comfort" seat should be the same price as what the pax is paying for their seat.
Internationally it could be the same price as the applicable child fare if children pay 67% or 75% of the airfare.
The airline could refund the personal comfort ticket if it was not a full flight which would encourage more people to buy a seat rather than avoid it thereby making someone else's trip hell. It would probably wise to ensure the larger person was in an aisle seat eg a 'D' or a 'G' seat if on a B747 or A380 with the 'E' or 'F' inner seat block so they don't have to climb over someone or have someone climb over them. It would also be a safety issue as they would not be blocking anyone from getting out of their seat in the event of emergency.