If you fly intellectual airlines, wearing a cultivation top that reveals your trunk or having some tattoos could now be enough to make you start a flight.
The airline has recently briefed its policies to explicitly describe unacceptable costumes and appearance of passengers, surpassing the vague policies held by most other airlines. In the transfer contract, which is a legal document describing air and passenger responsibilities, the Spirit says that “a visitor is not allowed to board the aircraft or may be forced to leave an aircraft” if the passenger is “insufficiently dressed” or ” whose clothing or article, including body art, are faint, obscene or offensive nature. “
It is no longer defined in insufficiently dressed – with breasts, buttocks or other private parts exposed or wearing purely costume. But what exactly is an aggressive tattoo is unclear.
The clarification of all of these tends to fall to airline employees, including the flight crew. In recent years, the spirit and other airlines have stopped passengers from boarding their flights for all kinds of clothing or lack: gaiters, clothing printed with Expletio-Laded Slogans, small shorts and no bra.
Overall, most airlines leave very open in the interpretation, said Bobby Laurie, a former stewardess and co-iconic of the “The Jet” show.
“It’s very subjective,” Mr Laurie said. “What he can find offensive or naughty, someone else can’t.” In general, a decision to remove a traveler from a flight would require consensus from many airline officials, he added.
Here are some important domestic airlines about the passenger code in their transfer contracts.
Cultural Airlines
The airline says it will also block Barefoot passengers from boarding.
Southwest Airlines
Passengers cannot wear clothes that are “obscene, obscene or obviously offensive,” the airline says, without further details.
United Airlines
The airline says it will not carry barefoot passengers or passengers who are not “properly dressed” or whose clothes are “clumsy, obscene or offensive”.
Delta Air Lines
The costume leading to “irrational risk of offensive or annoyance to other passengers” is enough to remove a passenger, according to the Delta transfer contract.
US airlines
The American asks passengers to “dress properly”. This means that they are not bare feet or “offensive” clothes.
Jetblue Airways
Travelers over 5 years of age cannot be barefoot, says the airline. Again, it is not “obscene, obscene or obviously offensive” attire.
Alaska Airlines
Alaska Airlines also prohibits passengers from being barefoot and will remove travelers whose costume creates “an irrational risk or discomfort to other passengers”.
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