You can add dog bites to the list of things
passengers and flight attendants have to contend with at 30,000 feet.
That was the case this morning on board US
Airways flight 522 when a small dog travelling in the passenger cabin was let
out of its carrier by its owner. The dog promptly bit a passenger and a flight
attendant. An airline spokesperson could not confirm whether the bit passenger
was also the dog’s owner.
US Airways said that the passenger was
expressly told not to open the carrier door.
According to flight tracking website
FlightAware.com the plane was west of Pittsburgh when the pilot of the Airbus
A319 decided to divert the Phoenix-bound plane to Pittsburgh International
Airport because of the canine bites. A US Airways spokesperson described the
diversion as precautionary and said the captain did not declare an emergency.
Upon landing in Pittsburgh the plane taxied to
a US Airways gate where it was met by law enforcement officials and the fire
department. An airport spokesperson tells ABC News the dog, whose breed was not
immediately known, and its owner were deplaned and interviewed before being
released.
Once the dog and its owner were off the plane
the flight continued to Phoenix without them. JoAnn Jenny, a spokeswoman with
the Pittsburgh International Airport, said the dog and its owner were later
released to board another plane to Phoenix.
Airlines, including US Airways, United, and
American Airlines, limit the number and type of pets allowed in cabins. Those
banned from carry-on travel in the belly of the plane, where kennels are placed
in a special pressurized and temperature-controlled section of the plane. In
the winter, airlines may require documentation certifying that your pet is
acclimated to temperatures lower than 45 degrees.
The Dog Files
The Dog Files
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