keeponhurling wrote: » The airport bars make the profits
The only information that is tracked is the item purchased, the airline, and the destination in question. We do not record any personal information in relation to passengers. It is policy in our stores to ask that passengers present their boarding car when making a purchase, however if any passenger buying a non duty free product and does not wish to provide this information, we will still make the sale.
VinLieger wrote: » Just breathalyse people before they get on board, if they dont pass a reasonable level then tough you aint flying. Its called personal responsibility, no need to ruin the fun for everyone else cus a couple of morons are incapable of not drinking too much
seamus wrote: » Before you do anything, you should assert whether this is an actual problem. Ryanair love being in the news. What percentage of Ryanair flights have had security incidents on them due to passengers being intoxicated before take off? Identify whether a problem exists before we start proposing solutions to it. People getting gee-eyed pre flight is not something I've seen much, if any, of. Most people turn up 30-60 minutes before a flight, which doesn't leave a lot of time for getting hammered.
keeponhurling wrote: » Seems not unreasonable.http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/rise-in-passenger-arrests-prompts-ryanair-call-for-curb-on-pre-flight-drinking-802002.html"It's completely unfair that airports can profit from the unlimited sale of alcohol to passengers and leave the airlines to deal with the safety consequences," said Kenny Jacobs, chief marketing officer at Ryanair. The airport bars make the profits, where the airlines and air hostesses deal with the hassle of drunk passengers.
Vic_08 wrote: » Ryanair in particular have a cheek criticising airports for flogging booze to passengers. Their entire business model is based on squeezing small regional airports to the point that they are paying Ryanair to host their flights. The airports are left with flogging stuff and car parking to generate revenue. BTW there is a BBC programme about this on tonight, presumably that is linked to this PR. Anything crappy involving flying that Ryanair can claim to not be their fault is worthy of a front page banner in their world.
According to tonight’s Panorama programme there have been 387 arrests for drunken air behaviour in the last year, a rise of 50%. The numbers may well be much higher says a former flight attendant
The worst thing I’ve seen is a passenger who mixed medication and alcohol – he thought we were trapping him and tried to open the plane door. It’s not actually possible but he scared a lot of people and he was restrained. In the morning, he had no recollection. My colleagues have experienced passengers urinating on people, performing public sexual activities and inflicting physical bodily harm. It is not acceptable and the time has come for the law to be enforced. With just 387 passengers arrested for drunken behaviour in the year to February 2017, yet 90% of crew saying they deal with such incidents, something doesn’t add up.
Academic wrote: » OK. Forget Ryanair for the moment. Are you denying that drunken passengers are a problem? If you are, then fair enough. But if you admit that it’s a problem for all airlines then why does it matter which one proposes a solution?
TheDoc wrote: » If I'm honest I've never fully understood that sort of behaviour, getting pissed before a flight. I've been on stags, weekends away, trips with lads for a week, loads of differing types of scenarios that involved a plane. And I've just never subscribed to "party starts before the flight". Like there is just an issue there if you can't wait until after your flight to get the drinks in. Have I had a drink before a flight? Sure I have, loads of times. but I've never felt the need or seen the point of getting pissed before my flight. It's ridiculous carry on to be fair and considering the increased security and just generally tension that goes on in airports know, I think you're just being a twat if your getting sauced before a flight.
Beefy78 wrote: » From the article: "The airline has already banned customers from drinking duty-free alcohol on flights and stopped people flying from Glasgow Prestwick and Manchester to Alicante and Ibiza from bringing it on board the aircraft at all." I'm pretty sure it's illegal to open/drink duty free booze on board. It's certainly illegal in America and I'd think it is here too. I love an airport pint so I hope they don't stop serving until 10am. That said I noticed T2 at Dublin is now selling two pint steins of beer. That doesn't seem like a great idea.
Beefy78 wrote: » I'm pretty sure it's illegal to open/drink duty free booze on board. It's certainly illegal in America and I'd think it is here too.