anat0l
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Dave Noble said:The girth of a passenger and the weight of the passenger cannot be a safety issue to the aircraft ( if it was , he would not be able to fly even paying extra ). Also, if it was for passenger comfort, it would make no issue since they are prepared to take him if he pays extra
Fair point, but the same is said about luggage. We can allow a few extra kilos here and there, and be prepared to charge high amounts for those that do want to carry the extra, but we don't outright say "it's 32kg in 1 bag or you don't fly". Well, at least I haven't seen it yet. As a corollary, why do we have a monetary penalty system for carrying extra baggage rather than an exclusive "make-the-weight-else-don't-fly" policy?
Also, there will be cases where there is such a passenger that cannot board the aircraft irrespective of any monetary penalty, because, as you have touched on, it will be a safety issue and no amount of money could pay for that. (e.g. person is so fat in girth that cannot be accommodated safely in a seat or may exceed seat stress specifications.) The passenger will just have to 'deal' really.
I'm sure there have also been cases where a passenger has brought along an impossible piece of luggage that cannot be checked into the aircraft (although it does not breach dangerous goods rules) and have been given the just 'comply-or-no-fly' treatment.
I guess 'fact' is that no one wants to admit that these are safety issues. This may be for PR reasons, but when push comes to shove the real reasons will surface - by then it's a bit over the top for common sense.
The system is in place; this system is not dependant on the airport staffing whims. It is actually contractually defined between the corporation and the airport staff, but of course some staff are just going to have weak knees at times and go "oh alright you can have that extra 5kg of luggage" etc. etc. and the airline can't really do much about it (these performance issues are not tracked). After all, these employees get paid no matter what (as long as the plane doesn't crash) so they don't really give much a damn about the "safety" issues (they appear to be too small to be concerned with such issues). There are no tracking metrics (they don't weigh the planes! Let alone the weight of the cargo going in). And the last thing that these employees want is to get ranted and raved at. Hence the apparent 'failure' of the weight restriction system. (Yeah the same is going to happen if they start weighing people...)Dave Noble said:If the airline wants to be restrict passengers based on size ( which is a fair enough imo) then it should be an objective measure and not on the whims of airport staff. Can you imagine the chaos if QF did not specify a specific luggage allowance but just left the decision to what is ok to allow to staff at airports