Don’t fly high: 7 reasons to lose the booze

by Christopher Elliott on November 17, 2009

Don’t drink and fly.

Words to live by, not just if you’re a pilot, but if you’re a passenger.

Sandra Langer explains why: On a recent trip from Amsterdam to New York, she watched a good number of her fellow passengers get hammered. “Red-faced men blocked the aisles, puked in the bathroom and groped the females — along with a laughing crew,” says Langer, a writer who lives in New York.

That’s right, some crewmembers were also inebriated. The trip made a lasting impression on Langer. “Never again will I take a connecting flight through Amsterdam,” she says.

Stories like hers make you wonder if it’s time to limit, or even stop serving alcohol on flights.

Some airlines do. Bahrain’s parliament earlier this year voted to ban alcohol on Gulf Air flights. Other carriers have policies that limit the amount of alcohol that can be served to passengers.

Not that current laws are what you would call permissive. Federal law restricts alcoholic beverages from being served on a plane without proper certification. It forbids alcohol from being given to someone who appears to be intoxicated, is escorting a prisoner or is carrying “a deadly or dangerous weapon.”

When I proposed an alcohol ban on flights more than a decade ago the response from readers was a resounding “no”. But a lot has changed since then. We’ve had a series of drunken-passenger incidents, each one of which leaves you questioning why passengers are allowed to drink on a plane at all. (I asked the Federal Aviation Administration if any changes were planned to current alcohol-related rules. None are.)

I’ve changed, too. Eleven years ago, I would have though nothing of ordering a glass of wine on a flight. The ban idea? That just made for an interesting story in 1998. But today, as the father of three who doesn’t drink much anymore, I can see the wisdom of abstaining for a few hours on the plane — if not longer.

Here are a few reasons for keeping the cocktails grounded:

1. Alcohol heightens a stressful experience.
Unless you haven’t flown in a few years, you probably know that air travel is getting more stressful. Alcohol can make it worse, say experts. “Drinking on planes has unique hazards, particularly as flying becomes more stressful,” says Karen Sternheimer, a sociologist who teaches at the University of Southern California. “If there is a long delay on the tarmac the irritation can be magnified by alcohol.” At a bare minimum, passengers need to be sober enough to understand and cooperate with crew instructions. “Under increasingly stressful conditions, too much alcohol can make a simple annoyance into a serious problem,” she adds.

2. There’s nowhere to run.
Anywhere else, you can walk away from an unruly drunk. But not on a plane. “It’s a metal tube and blasting off at hundreds of miles per hour,” says Jeffrey Lord, a veteran frequent flier based in Burlington, Vt. (Lord believes alcohol isn’t the only problem on a plane. “How about spending hours strapped in with these stressed-out companions with nothing other than caffeinated beverages being served?” he asks. Good point.)

3. Drinks on a plane aren’t just intoxicating — they’re toxic.
“Higher altitudes do amplify the affect of alcohol, which, as you can imagine, can cause problems for passengers that imbibe too much,” says Ashley Halsey, a spokeswoman for American Behavioral, a healthcare organization that specializes in drug and alcohol abuse and treatment for employers. “Because alcohol impairs judgment, the likelihood of violent or other anti-social behavior is increased. When people fly, they also get dehydrated, and alcoholics tend to drink alcohol instead of water, which tends to increase their adverse reaction.”

4. It’s annoying.
Just listen to Terry Ward’s account of her last flight from Orlando to Newark. “I sat next to a group of guys who were on their way to Montreal for a boys’ weekend,” she remembers. “They started drinking right after we took off and didn’t stop. Hard liquor the whole flight.

I thought the flight attendants would stop serving them but they didn’t, because one of the guys was tipping them $20 each round.” Instead of cutting off the passengers, she made all of their drinks doubles, as they requested. “It was completely obnoxious,” she adds.

5. It’s embarrassing, too.
Who doesn’t have a story to tell about having one too many on a plane? Here’s Denise Vardakas’. She and her mother were flying from San Diego to Grand Cayman, and on their final leg they enjoyed “endless Jack and Diet Cokes.” She adds, “We were having a great time chatting with the crew members, and a few of our fellow passengers.” On their way back a week later, the same crewmembers greeted them as the “Jack and Diet” ladies. Oh, my.

6. You could relapse.
If you’re off the booze, a plane trip is a relapse waiting to happen, say experts. “I’m still constantly surprised by how many of my patients will relapse or overdrink on planes,” says Carrie Wilkens, the co-founder and clinical director of the Center for Motivation & Change, a private group practice in New York that specializes in treating addiction and compulsive behaviors.

“It’s gotten to the point where I’ve heard it as a therapist so regularly that now, when any one of my clients is planning a trip, I tell them, ‘OK, we have to make up a plan for how you’re going to manage this flight.’” Her patients inevitably agree that they drink more in the air, and take precautions to avoid it.

7. How are you getting home?

Even if you survive your flight without incident, there remains the issue of getting back home. If you’re planning to drive, you might keep the case of Dana Papst in mind. A few years ago, after disembarking from a US Airways flight on which he was served alcohol, he crashed his car, killing himself and five others. The FAA later cleared the airline of any wrongdoing.

I don’t consider myself a modern-day prohibitionist, but I think these practical reasons for keeping the skies alcohol-free make sense.

Why not wait until you’re home to crack open a bottle? It could make your next flight a better one — if not save your life.

Print Friendly

  • Brian

    Chris,
    Again you will hear a “NO” on banning booze. 99.9% of the people drink responsibly. It makes no sense to put a 100% ban for a few problems each year. Next you will want to ban all carry-on cases, computers, etc. since they cause “problems”. I enjoy a glass or two of wine when traveling to Europe or beyond. Why should you “punish” me with the ban when I haven’t done anything. I fly thousands of miles per year and have never seen a problem on a flight.

  • Joel Wechsler

    Two problems I see are that people can still drink too much before they board and can also bring their own liquor onto the plane. It’s not hard to order a Coke or other non-alcoholic beverage and then slip,something of your own into it.

  • Frank

    On a recent trip from Amsterdam to New York, she watched a good number of her fellow passengers get hammered.
    That’s right, some crewmembers were also inebriated.
    ==============================================

    I’m surprised to read this. All “United States” Flight Attendants are drug and ALCOHOL tested. It’s verboten to drink on the job. What country or airline allows their cabin crews to drink??? What airline was this on???

  • Espen

    When I go on my 9 to 10 hours flights back and forth between San Francisco and Paris, I would like to be able to have wine with my meals.

    I have personally never experienced any drunk passengers.

    If you stop serving alcohol onboard, some people will just get wasted at the airport before the flight.

    I trust that most flight attendants know how to take care of people that have been drinking to much.

    Airlines has been much cheaper about offering alcoholic drinks.

    Some smokers may go to drinks since they can’t smoke. Not a good solution, but many are just nervous about flying.

  • Richard H

    Quote: [The trip made a lasting impression on Langer. “Never again will I take a connecting flight through Amsterdam,” she says.]

    What does this have to do with Amsterdam? Perhaps she would be well-advised to never take another flight to New York!

    I am Platinum (by booking -many- coach flights) and have seen nothing more than a few tipsy passengers in the last two decades. I think that a simple chat with the Purser would solve this problem on any international flight.

  • Dave

    I don’t necessarily see that alcohol needs to be banned on flights, but I’m all for strict limits. But it’s a profit center – don’t count on the airlines to voluntary reduce sales.

  • R M

    HOW MANY “drunken-passenger incidents” – HOW MANY PASSENGERS. LITTLE NUMBERS – BIG NUMBERS. THINK ABOUT IT.

  • Alan

    Banning alcohol is more nanny state nonsense. Ban food because some people are morbidly obese. Ban magazines because someone might have one with pictures or political opinions you don’t like. Ban passengers, because some don’t shower.
    How about expecting adults to act responsibly and dealing with the ones who don’t.

  • http://Hotmail David Farnham

    Just because you have stopped drinking doesn’t mean the rest of us should be forced to–especially in view of the known health benefits of moderate alcohol use. I don’t think that the decision of Bahrein airlines has anything to do witha lcohol abuse per se; they’re based in a Moslem country

Previous post:

Next post: