
Delta Proposed No-Fly List-
Delta Air Lines is asking the Justice Department to put airline passengers convicted of disrupting flights on a national no-fly list, barring them from traveling on any commercial flights, according to a letter obtained Friday by several news outlets.
In 2021, the FAA initiated nearly 1,100 investigations into unruly passenger behavior, more than the number launched in the previous seven years combined. The agency received nearly 6,000 reports of airline passengers acting out, a vast majority of which were related to mask requirements put into place to stem the spread of COVID-19.
Nearly 1,900 people have been put on Delta’s no-fly list for refusing to comply with masking requirements, Bastian said in the letter sent to Garland, according to a copy published by Axios. He added that the airline has called for its aviation partners to share their own no-fly lists to prevent those people from traveling on other airlines.
IN RELATED NEWS:
Passengers on Southwest flights who want to imbibe mid-flight will soon be able to do so once again. The airline announced that beer, wine and hard liquor will once again be served on board flights starting on Feb. 16, CNN reported.

After being at Logan last week and seeing a customer be pulled from a flight because she dared to ask a employee at Jet Blue a question I am definetly not in favor as I can see this easily become a huge issue. We were right there and she was respectful and not rude. She had paid for a MINT flight and she was not in MINT. She did not understand why and the employee didn’t feel the need to make it clear. She and her husband were pulled because the employee could make it happen.
LikeLike