Good question, of course...But I don't want to name any airlines here, and frankly, it won't matter for most readers. I fly frequently parts of the arctic where there are airlines that are almost charter airlines, but they have some regularly scheduled routes at some times of the year for passengers. The aircraft they use are very small -- some can hold about 12 passengers, tops. The only 'flight attendant' is the co-pilot. But this is the way things are done in some places, and the pilots are really excellent, the planes well maintained, and the ground-crew/support staff are excellent as well. But they do not have bathrooms. Passengers are cautioned about this in advance.
Oh, and there is no security between the passenger area and the cargo hold -- or for that matter, the cockpit (or I guess I should use the term 'flight deck' nowadays, but for the sake of clarity I will give both). The north is huge, and frankly, even if there was enough business to justify weekly jet service (which would not itself be enough), the cost of building landing strips and upgrading jets to fly and land up north would not be anywhere close to cost effective.
That is super interesting to me. I'm dying to know more - about the planes, up north in general, etc. I won;t tie up the thread but I might contact you later if you're willing to tell me more about how all that works!! It sounds remote and exciting.
You'll never catch me strapped in on a roller coaster
I've had to go many times when the line to the women's bathroom was ridiculously long. Especially at concerts when I was much younger. I've went in the men's room..( never seems to be a line there) I've went outside in bushes, wooded areas, behind trees, behind buildings, once I was stuck on the Walt Whitman Bridge for two hours because someone was being talked out of jumping off of it. They stopped all traffic. I had an SUV at the time, thankfully with tinted windows. I climbed in the back and peed in a empty cup.
I've gotten up and went on a plane when I wasn't supposed to.
I have never been forced to sit and soil myself. Never.
And
I would never force a child to either.
IMO it's inhumane.
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You gave me options that do not exist in a plane when it's cleared for take off. Let me give you one I think is more analogous: In an elevator, with other people, strangers, and it gets stuck.
I sympathize. I have a small bladder. In my twenties, I once peed myself waiting for a bathroom to open up. I also use men's bathrooms, all the time and I have no problem peeing in the bushes. I also used the cup method before.
The point is, there are times when the bathroom is unavailable and a person has to really, really go, so they pee their pants, and it may be no one's fault.
I'm horrified too, but lets look at the differences between your experience and this womans with her daughter.
1. You were in a home, not a public place.
2. Your daughter was embarrassed in front of family, this child was embarrassed in front of dozens of strangers.
3. You promptly (I'm hoping) cleaned your daughter up, changing her clothes and such, this woman was not permitted to clean her child up or change her clothes, when she attempted to the FA called the pilot.
Seeing any differences here?? I certainly do.
The kid is three. I was a preschool teacher and daycare worker for years. No one is going to convince me that kids at age 3, just potty trained, have the same sense of shame and self awareness that an adult does, or someone at age 13 or even 6.
Come on, all of us have heard a kid, (sometimes even our own kids) yelling about having to poop, or something, in public. Or stripping off clothing in public, or lifting their skirts, or walking up with wet underwear at the park and guilessly telling you they peed. Most three year olds are not mortified that they wet themselves, unless you make them feel mortified by causing a scene.
Except it was NO ACCIDENT.
Can't we stick to the facts here?
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Peeing your pants because a bathroom is unavailable for whatever reason (that includes rules), is an accident. No one told the kid - "Pee your pants or I will hit you."
I never said it was going to cause irreparable harm or that it was over the top traumatic and would cause life long issues.
The kid was clearly stressed and upset and crying. She didn't want to soil herself. Would you? How would you react if forced to soil yourself on a plane?
But is that the bar now? As long as it doesn't cause irreparable harm to a child is acceptable?
Ummm NO.
IMO
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Soiling means pooping one's pants. Not peeing.
Kids that age are different and can handle public bodily functions, or nakedness, far better than adults. It's just not a reasonable analogy.
That being said, I totally agree that kids should not be treated without dignity just because they are small. They do have feelings too. And things like this can create lasting impressions or memories. Of course parents can prevent that by their own reaction.
Neither the apology from Jetblue not the mother stating that an off duty pilot and "other passengers" came to her defense, is very convincing to me, that the FA was wrong. She could have been. I wasn't there.
But I know there are strict rules for a reason. A comment after one of the articles about this explains: "If any passenger is out of their seat while they are on an active runway they aren't allowed to move. Not sure of the case of this ground hold but if it was weather related and there would have been a small break in weather there could have been a tight window to take off and if a PAX was in the lav they would have lost that opportunity and could have lost their place in the takeoff queue and would have meant a much longer delay.
The people posting on here defending the mother obviously don't fly very often or they would know it's not a simple matter of telling the mother the girl could get up. They would know with a weather or ATC ground traffic hold that sometimes there will be a very short break in the weather, etc and the plane needs to take off right away."
BTW, I;m not a fan of putting a potty trained child in pull ups to avoid something like this. It takes work to potty train a child. It is very confusing to put them back in what they equate to "diapers".
I also don;t like rules for rules' sake and believe in using common sense as well.
But I definitely appreciate and respect the very strict rules of flying and passenger safety. (And I am NOT talking about the TSA here, who like to grope through old lady's diapers). Flying is the safest industry in existence.
In this case, I just don't know if we are just dealing with an irate, irritated parent who caused a scene after a delay and due to strict rules the FA had no choice but to follow, or with a bureaucratic martinet who could not think for herself, or with a pilot who overreacted, or with all three, or none of the above or a combination.
But I do know that it took hard work and years of training to combat my fear of flying and I don't want defensive parents or ridiculous bureaucrats to mess things up.
This is a sensitive topic for me (airline safety) due to how far I have come.