NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,082
How so?
By the existence of the FAA, and the fact that "security" fees are charged to the passenger rather than to the airline.
When the FAA was created during the Eisenhower administration, it was established with a dual mandate, to oversee safety and encourage the development of the passenger air industry. The irony, of course, is that the dual mandate worked at cross-purposes: it is impossible to require the safest operating practices and still "encourage" the industry to grow larger, because the cost of safety equipment and procedures cut deeply into the industry's bottom line, and discourages expansion of service. Heck, that is even why a 2 yo can still fly as a lap child, because the FAA's tests show that the most likely outcome of requiring ticket purchase for babies is that the entire family will drive instead of fly, where the likelihood of that baby being involved in an accident statistically climbs -- and where, not coincidentally, the airline loses the revenue of at least two sold seats.
Here's a nice little timeline that helps to show a bit of the relationship between airlines and the Federal government over the years.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/flyingcheap/etc/cronfaa.html