‘If you aren’t properly dressed, you can’t fly’

passenger because her T-shirt bore a four-letter expletive. She was allowed to keep flying after draping a shawl over the shirt. Both women told their stories to sympa­thetic bloggers, and the debate over what you can wear in the air went viral.
It’s not always clear what’s appropriate. Air­lines don’t publish dress codes. There are no rules that spell out the highest hemline or the lowest neckline allowed. That can leave passen­gers guessing how far to push fashion bound­aries. Every once in a while the airline says: Not that far.
“It’s like any service business. If you run a family restaurant and somebody is swearing, you kindly ask them to leave,” says Kenneth Quinn, an aviation lawyer and former chief counsel at the US Federal Aviation Adminis­tration.
The American Airlines passenger, who declined to be interviewed by The Associated Press, works for an abortion provider. Sup­porters suggested that she was singled out because her T-shirt had a pro-choice slogan.
A spokesman for American says the pas­senger was asked to cover up “because of the F-word on the T-shirt.”
He says that the air­line isn’t taking sides in the abortion debate. Last week, Arijit Guha, a graduate student at Arizona State University, was barred from a Delta flight in Buffalo, NY, because of a T-shirt that mocked federal security agents and included the words, “Terrists gonna kill us all.” He says the misspelled shirt was satirical and he wore it to protest what he considers racial pro­filing.
“I thought it was a very American idea to speak up and dissent when you think people’s rights are being violated,” Guha says. The pilot thought it scared other passengers.
American and Delta are within their rights to make the passengers change shirts even if messages are political, says Joe Larsen, a First Amendment lawyer from Houston who has defended many media companies.
The First Amendment prohibits govern­ment from limiting a person’s free-speech rights, but it doesn’t apply to rules set by pri­vate compa­nies, Larsen says.
He notes that government security screeners didn’t chal­lenge Guha; pri­vate Delta employees did. In short, since airlines and their planes are private property and not a public space like the courthouse steps, crews can tell you what to wear.
In the early years of jet travel, passengers dressed up and confrontations over clothing were unimaginable.  They’re still rare — there aren’t any precise numbers — but when showdowns happen, they gain more attention as aggrieved passen­gers complain on the Internet about airline clothing cops.
It’s unwelcome publicity for air­lines, which already rate near the bottom of all industries when it comes to customer satisfac­tion.
Critics complain that airlines enforce cloth­ing standards inconsistently. The lack of clear rules leaves decisions to the judgment of indi­vidual airline employees.
Last year, a passenger was pulled off a US Airways jet and arrested at San Francisco Inter­national Airport after airline employees say he refused to pull up his low-hanging pants. The local prosecutor declined to file charges against Deshon Marman, a Univer­sity of New Mexico football player.
Marman’s lawyer complained that the same airline repeatedly allowed a middle-age man to travel wearing women’s underwear and not much else.
“You can’t let someone repugnant like that (the cross-dresser) on the plane and single out this kid because he’s black, wearing dreadlocks, and had two or three inches of his underwear showing,” says the lawyer, Joseph D. O’Sullivan.
He says the airline doesn’t have a dress code but that employees may talk to a passen­ger if other people might be offended by the way he’s dressed.  — AFP.

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