FAA Promotes Air
Travel Safety Tips
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Administrator Michael Huerta is
encouraging travelers to Fly Smart this summer.
“As we head into summer, I’m asking air travelers to keep
safety in mind as they pack their bags and during their flights,” said FAA
Administrator Huerta. “Fly Smart and be prepared. Your actions can save your
life and those around you.”
Flying has become so safe that many travelers take it for
granted. Over the course of several decades, government and industry worked
together to significantly reduce the risk of accidents and to
improve airplane design, maintenance, training,
and procedures. But emergencies can still happen.
Travelers can
give themselves an extra margin of safety by taking a few minutes to follow
these guidelines:
- In the
unlikely event that you need to evacuate, leave your bags and personal
items behind. Your luggage is not worth your life. All passengers are
expected to evacuate the airplane within 90 seconds. You do not have time
to grab your luggage or personal items. Opening an overhead compartment
will delay the evacuation and will put the lives of everyone around you at
risk.
- Pack safe and leave hazardous materials
at home. Many common items such as lithium batteries, lighters, and
aerosols may be dangerous when transported by air. Vibrations, static
electricity, and temperature and pressure variations can cause hazardous
materials to leak, generate toxic fumes, start a fire, or even explode.
Check the FAA’s Pack Safe website for the
rules on carrying these items. When in doubt, leave it out.
- If you
are travelling with e-cigarettes or vaping devices, keep these devices and
spare batteries with you in the aircraft cabin—they are prohibited in
checked baggage. These devices may not be used or charged onboard
aircraft.
- If you
have any other spare batteries, pack them only in your carry-on baggage
and use a few measures to keep them from short circuiting: keep the
batteries in their original packaging, tape over the electrical
connections with any adhesive, non-metallic tape, or place each battery in
its own individual plastic bag. You cannot fly with damaged or recalled
batteries.
- Do not
pack or carry any type of fireworks. This includes firecrackers, poppers,
sparklers, bottle rockets, roman candles, etc. No matter where you
are, fireworks are always illegal in airline baggage.
- Prevent
in-flight injuries by following your airline’s carry-on bag restrictions.
- For
your safety, follow crew instructions. It’s a Federal law.
- Use
your electronic device only when the crew
says it’s safe to do so.
- Flight
attendants perform important safety duties and are trained on how to
respond to emergencies. It just takes a few minutes to pay attention to
the flight attendant during the safety briefing, read the safety briefing
card, and follow the instructions. It could save your life in an
emergency.
- Buckle
up. Wear a seatbelt at all times. It could help you avoid serious injury
in the event of unexpected inflight turbulence.
- Protect
young children by providing them with a child safety seat or device. Your
arms cannot hold onto a child during turbulence or an emergency. An FAA video shows how to install a
child safety seat on an airplane.
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