Monthly Archives

Monthly Archives for January 2017.

Legal Immigrants Who Were on Flights to the US When Trump’s Executive Order Was Signed Have Been Detained

passport getting stamped
Jan 28 2017

The President’s executive order on immigration, which imposes new conditions on entry for citizens of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen, took immediate effect.

There was no grace period, there were passengers who were legally headed to the U.S. when their flights took off but who – after the order was signed – became inadmissible to the United States.

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New Executive Order Demands Immigration Checks When You Leave the US, Not Just When You Arrive

Jan 28 2017

The Trump administration executive order on immigration has most widely been reported to temporarily ban visas for people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen — even for those who have been living in the U.S. in valid employment or student status but who need new visas for re-entry.

What’s getting less attention is section 7 of the order that demands immigration controls when you leave the U.S. not just when you arrive.

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How American Airlines Plans to Make You Spend More Money in 2017

Jan 27 2017

American Airlines spoke several times in its quarterly earnings call about its new Basic Economy fares that it will begin offering shortly.

They say that “basic and premium economy combined” will be worth more than $1 billion in incremental revenue to the airline, that they’ll get 20% of the way there this year and 80% next year. They don’t split up their projections across the two, and they haven’t even begun selling either (let alone retrofitting international widebodies to sell premium economy). But those numbers are insane.

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TSA May Stop Giving PreCheck to Many Passengers Starting Next Wednesday

security line
Jan 27 2017

Supposedly the TSA is going to stop sending people through PreCheck who haven’t registered for PreCheck (or one of the other programs that comes with PreCheck).

They’ve said this before — an end to one “managed inclusion” program, but a continuation of another. The TSA has sent ‘Behavior Detection Officers’ to pick people out of line for expedited screening. These staffers have had a short course in mind reading pretending to be Israeli reading body language to pick out who is a threat and who isn’t, but there’s no indication that the training is effective or that the employees are any good at it.

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How to Enjoy Wine on Your Next Flight

Jan 26 2017

Wine matters in premium cabins, mostly in my opinion for branding reasons. Qantas is the third largest buyer of Australian wine. Emirates is said to have spent $500 million acquiring wine for its flights.

Wine certainly can taste very different in the air than on the ground. Champagne often works well onboard, and I tend to favor it over even better old world wines.

Most people don’t know very much about wine (I suspect that the average premium cabin customer is like my seatmate who brought her own wine in a coffee cup onboard), though they think of it as a luxury good. Delta’s wine program recognizes this specifically avoiding bottles that are priced too inexpensively at retail (lest people think they’re low quality, regardless of taste) and that have too unsophisticated a label.

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11 More Airlines Just Joined PreCheck, Make Sure Your Known Traveler Number is Up to Date

people walking in airport
Jan 26 2017

Back in September Lufthansa became the 19th airline set up with TSA PreCheck. By joining Air Canada, Etihad, Aeromexico and WestJet, what was once US airlines only — and not even all of them at that — the massive US data-sharing, surveillance and passenger-convenience program had gone global.

The TSA’s website still lists only 19 airlines however they’ve just announced the addition of 11 more airlines including Spirit, Virgin Atlantic, Emirates and Avianca.

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