Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Info About Unruly Passengers Should Be Shared To Help Keep The Skies Safer: Air Canada

Darpan News Desk, 17 Feb, 2016 12:58 PM
  • Info About Unruly Passengers Should Be Shared To Help Keep The Skies Safer: Air Canada
OTTAWA — Air carriers should be allowed to share information about unruly passengers to help keep the skies safer, Canada's largest airline says.
 
A carrier can ban people with a history of disruptive behaviour from taking further flights with that airline, Air Canada notes in a submission to the federal government.
 
But legislation does not permit airlines to exchange information about passengers, even when they believe them to be a safety risk to others.
 
In the submission to a federal review of the Canada Transportation Act, Air Canada says safety "should always be first and foremost."
 
A report flowing from the review — likely to include some recommendations about air safety — is expected to be made public in coming weeks.
 
An Alberta man was charged in late December after a flight attendant was injured on an Air Canada flight to India. The plane had to turn around and head back to Toronto, where it was met by police.
 
World airlines reported 9,316 cases of unruly behaviour in the skies in 2014 — or one incident for every 1,289 flights, according to the International Air Transport Association, an industry group.
 
 
That same year, more than 100 members of the Montreal-based International Civil Aviation Organization, a United Nations agency, adopted a new protocol that would extend jurisdiction over an offence involving an unruly passenger to the destination country, not just the country of aircraft registration.
 
If the protocol is ratified, this measure would close a loophole that has allowed many serious offences to escape legal action, the air transport association says.
 
The civil aviation organization has provided airlines with a four-tiered scheme of threat levels to help gauge the seriousness of a disruptive passenger:
 
— Level One — Disruptive behaviour (verbal);
 
— Level Two — Physically abusive behaviour;
 
— Level Three — Life-threatening behaviour (or display of a weapon);
 
— Level Four — Attempted or actual breach of the flight crew compartment.
 
Air Canada says carriers should be allowed to share information with other carriers about travellers involved in Level Three or Four incidents.
 
"This practice would help to ensure the safety of other passengers and the safe operation of the flight, as well as reduce costs associated with returning passengers with a history of disruptive behaviour," the airline's submission says. 
 
Air Canada spokesman Peter Fitzpatrick said Monday the airline had no additional comment.
 
The federal privacy commissioner's office said it was unaware of Air Canada's sharing proposal, had not studied the issue and could provide no comment at this time.

MORE National ARTICLES

Residents Plucked From Balconies As Fire Races Through Large Surrey Apartment

Residents Plucked From Balconies As Fire Races Through Large Surrey Apartment
The most extensive damage appears to be on the top floor of a newer three or four storey building not far from the Gateway SkyTrain station (on King George Boulevard at 108 Street.)

Residents Plucked From Balconies As Fire Races Through Large Surrey Apartment

Stepdad Says Kamloops Teen Texted She Was Pregnant Hours Before She Was Killed

Stepdad Says Kamloops Teen Texted She Was Pregnant Hours Before She Was Killed
"'Dad, I have something to tell you — I'm pregnant,'" Glen Wilson testified Tuesday, recalling the text he received from CJ Fowler

Stepdad Says Kamloops Teen Texted She Was Pregnant Hours Before She Was Killed

Richmond Police Search For Suspect After Sex Assault Outside R.C. Palmer Secondary School

Richmond Police Search For Suspect After Sex Assault Outside R.C. Palmer Secondary School
Mounties are looking for a man who allegedly groped a female student and then exposed himself outside a high school

Richmond Police Search For Suspect After Sex Assault Outside R.C. Palmer Secondary School

Police Search For Safe-Cracking Crook After Hefty ATM Haul In Vernon

Police Search For Safe-Cracking Crook After Hefty ATM Haul In Vernon
Const. Jocelyn Noseworthy says someone broke into the drive-thru automated teller kiosk at the Interior Savings Credit Union last Thursday night.

Police Search For Safe-Cracking Crook After Hefty ATM Haul In Vernon

Nova Scotia Man Gets Overly Comfy In B.C. Home After Stealing Truck In Ontario

Nova Scotia Man Gets Overly Comfy In B.C. Home After Stealing Truck In Ontario
Christopher Hiscock, 33, was not at home and didn't know the owners of a ranch where he became a bit too comfortable.

Nova Scotia Man Gets Overly Comfy In B.C. Home After Stealing Truck In Ontario

Aboriginal Agency Says B.C. Government Shifting Blame In Foster Teen's Death

Aboriginal Agency Says B.C. Government Shifting Blame In Foster Teen's Death
Premier Christy Clark has accused the Fraser Valley Aboriginal Children and Family Services Society of making a "real mistake" for not telling the Children's Ministry that 18-year-old Alex Gervais was staying alone in a hotel.

Aboriginal Agency Says B.C. Government Shifting Blame In Foster Teen's Death