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SMOKING
Under U.S.
government rules, smoking is prohibited on all
domestic scheduled-service flights except for
flights over six hours to or from Alaska or
Hawaii. This ban applies to domestic segments of
international flights, on both U.S. and foreign
airlines (e.g., the Chicago / New York leg of a
flight that operates Chicago/ New York /
London). The ban does not apply to nonstop
international flights, even during the time that
they are in U.S. airspace (e.g., a Chicago /
London flight). The prohibition applies in the
passenger cabin and lavatories, but not in the
cockpit. Smoking is also banned on other
scheduled-service flights by U.S. airlines that
are operated with planes seating fewer than 30
passengers (e.g., certain "commuter" flights to
Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean). Cigar and
pipe smoking is banned on all U.S.-carrier
flights (scheduled and charter, domestic and
international). The following rules apply to
U.S. airlines on flights where smoking is not
banned (e.g. international flights, domestic
charter flights). These regulations do not apply
to foreign airlines; however, most of them
provide non-smoking sections (although they may
not guarantee seating there or expand the
section).
- The airline must provide a seat in a
non-smoking section to every passenger who
asks for one, as long as the passenger
complies with the carrier's seat assignment
deadline and procedures. (Standby passengers
do not have this right.)
- If necessary, the airline must
expand the non-smoking section to accommodate
the passengers described above.
- The airline does not have to provide
a non-smoking seat of the passenger's choice.
It doesn't have to seat you with your
traveling companion, and you don't have the
right to specify a window or aisle
non-smoking seat. Also, the airline is not
required by this rule to provide advance seat
assignments before the flight date in the
non-smoking section, as long as they get you
into the non-smoking section on the day of
your flight.
- The flight crew must act to keep
passengers from smoking in the non-smoking
sections. However, smoke that drifts from the
smoking section into the non-smoking section
does not constitute a violation.
- No smoking is allowed while an
aircraft is on the ground or when the
ventilation system is not fully functioning.
- Carriers are not required to have a
smoking section. An airline is free to ban
smoking on a particular flight or on all of
its flights.
None of the
regulations described in this chapter apply to
charter flights performed with small aircraft by
on-demand air taxi operators.
NOTICE
We make every
effort to keep Fly-Rights up to date, but
airlines frequently change the way they do
business. So by the time you read this a few of
the procedures we have covered may be different.
Tenth Revised Edition, September 1994
We hope these tips have been useful. Contact us
if you have any suggestions at:
feedback@airguideonline.com
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