SmokingUnder 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 the 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 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).
None of the regulations described apply to charter flights performed with small aircraft by on-demand air taxi operators. |
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Copyright © 2001 Robert Sherman