Family kicked off of plane due to crying toddler


Recommended Posts

Antsy tot, 3, gets family kicked off AirTran plane

Parents say Fort Myers flight crew acted too fast

By Jacob Ogles

[email protected]

Originally posted on January 24, 2007

The way Gerry Kulesza describes it, his 3-year-old granddaughter Elly could win over anybody after talking for a few minutes.

"She is the apple of every grandfather's eye," the 57-year-old said.

But the crew of an AirTran Airways flight from Fort Myers to Boston disagreed and forced the child and her parents off a flight leaving from Southwest International Airport.

Elly and her parents, Julie and Gerry Kulesza, both 30, were removed from a flight Jan. 14 when the 3-year-old refused to buckle-up in her seat before takeoff. The family was going home to Worchester, Mass., after visiting the elder Gerry Kulesza and his wife Pat in their Bonita Springs winter home.

"(Elly) was climbing under the seat and hitting the parents and wouldn't get in her seat," said AirTran spokeswoman Judy Graham-Weaver.

AirTran officials say they were following Federal Aviation Administration regulations that said the child must be in her own seat wearing a belt during takeoff.

"The flight was already delayed 15 minutes, and in fairness to the other 112 passengers on the plane the crew made an operational decision to remove the family," Graham-Weaver said.

But Julie Kulesza said: "We weren't given an opportunity to hold her, console her or anything.

"Elly was sitting in front of our seat crying," she said in a phone interview. "The attendant motioned to a seat and asked if we purchased it for her."

They had paid for the seat.

Gerry Kulesza said another attendant then approached the family and told him: "You need to get her in control and in her seat."

Julie Kulesza said she asked whether the girl could sit in a parent's lap, but was told no.

The Orlando-based airline has since reimbursed the family the $595.80 cost of the flight. It has also offered free round-trip tickets to anywhere the airline flies, but the family has declined the offer.

"They were totally humiliated," the elder Kulesza said of his son and daughter-in-law. "My son doesn't ever want to fly on AirTran again, and I don't blame him."

When the family was kicked off, all luggage was left on the flight. The parents were not offered any shelter accommodations in the Fort Myers area while they waited 24 hours for a new flight.

"Thank goodness we have a permanent residence down here," the elder Kulesza said. "I just told them to stay calm and that we would take care of them."

The delay caused the younger Gerry to miss a 16-hour shift at his job as an EMT in Massachusetts, and Julie also had to miss a day of work.

The grandfather said flight attendants on the plane were unprofessional and the treatment of the 3-year-old was a great overreaction.

"Nobody wants to sit on a plane with a crying child, but your first attempt should be to remedy the situation before you take a drastic action, and that wasn't done.

"My granddaughter is 3. Kids are kids."

? The Associated Press contributed to this report.

i>

SOURCE

Spoiled kid. If they can not discipline their kids than they should not take them on a plane.... I totally agree with the flight crew, and their decision to take the family off the plane. If you can not put your kid in the seat in 15 mints then you are not going to do it in 30 mints either.

it's the parents fault. they couldn't get their child to sit down and buckled up so the already delayed flight could take off. It was done out of fairness to the other passengers on the plane. I could see why this was done however, the airline should have acted in a more professional manner before it got blown out of proportion.

They didn't even get a hotel offered to them? What a low-quality airline.

Why should they offer a hotel to some moronic family that delayed their flight nearly a half hour because they don't feel like controlling their kid. I am pretty sure you can force a 3 yr old to fit in an airline seat, and if you are too soft to make ur kid do something, get the hell off the plane and quit punishing everyone around you. Complete and total ignorance. I have flew on airtran many times they are a good company, and right in what they did.

I am sure the only reason they reimbursed them and offered them free tickets is the publicity, since airlines are struggling so bad they are left with no choice, which is pretty damn sad.

it's the parents fault. they couldn't get their child to sit down and buckled up so the already delayed flight could take off. It was done out of fairness to the other passengers on the plane. I could see why this was done however, the airline should have acted in a more professional manner before it got blown out of proportion.

Exactly, can't say it much better than that. Too bad they couldn't have handled it slightly better (both parties involved :p)

If the flight attendants said, "You need to you get child under control and in her seat." then that is all the warning the family is required to get. The family keeps saying they weren't given a chance to get her under control and I say thats bs. For one, the flight was delayed 15 minutes before the family was kicked off. 15 minutes is more than enough time to get a kid under control if you're a good parent.

You look your kid straight in the eye and say, "sit down, put your seat belt on and be quiet or else." If you've disciplined your child correctly (and a majority of parents don't these days) then that child knows that the "or else" is going to be severe and unpleasant.

And two, public situations such as this have rules, both social and legal, that are in place to make the experience as painless as possible for EVERYONE. If the parents don't understand that, then tough luck and GTFOTP.

In addition, if your kid has trouble controling themselves in said public situations then you do the same thing to them as you do with pets. You drug them. Make them sleep through the whole flight and everyone is happier for it.

To the parents: Grow up and take responsibility. It's not the airline's fault you suck at parenting.

/endrant

The title of this thread is misleading. The family was kicked off the plane because the child wouldn't buckle her seatbelt. They would have kicked anyone off for not buckling their seatbelt after 15 minutes. If you can't control your child at 3 years old to understand that buckling up is important (the obviously were able to do it on the way out there) then you deserve to be removed from the flight.

Good. I'm sick of getting on an airplane and having someone's little kid kicking me in the face because they have to climb all over the seats and everything else. If the parents can't control their kid or the kid can't sit still for a few damn minutes, then kick them off!

This is amusing yet sad at the same time.

You can no more control children than you can predict the weather. For those of you who have kids, you know exactly what I'm talking about. For those who don't, take my word for it. Sometimes it's sunny and warm. But when it gets stormy, watch out. Especially in the "terrible twos". That's why they call it that (and it's usually around 3 years old, actually).

What are you going to do, knock the kid out? That's abuse. Discipline? What do you expect, to smack/spank your kid on a flight? What does that teach? Do you want to give your kid a "time out"? Where, exactly, do you expect to do that - in the seat that he won't sit in?

I can say that the airline probably did the right thing, if you take the situation at face value. I've had my kid (3 yrs old) go to the store with me and want to ride one of those kiddy rides, and threw a tantrum when I didn't have quarters. Well, we left, because he wasn't going to walk around the store with me, and then it was nearly impossible to get/keep him in the car's toddler seat. There are no straps tight enough to keep a toddler in a seat if he doesn't want to be there, and forcing him down is not the solution to calming him down.

Therefore, for the airline, it was simple logic, regardless of kid or not - passenger was not in their seat, refusing to sit, they leave. Giving people options is not how airplanes work, it'd be like saying "excuse me, can you hold takeoff for a few minutes, I need to finish this important phone call."

This is amusing yet sad at the same time.

You can no more control children than you can predict the weather. For those of you who have kids, you know exactly what I'm talking about. For those who don't, take my word for it. Sometimes it's sunny and warm. But when it gets stormy, watch out. Especially in the "terrible twos". That's why they call it that (and it's usually around 3 years old, actually).

What are you going to do, knock the kid out? That's abuse. Discipline? What do you expect, to smack/spank your kid on a flight? What does that teach? Do you want to give your kid a "time out"? Where, exactly, do you expect to do that - in the seat that he won't sit in?

I can say that the airline probably did the right thing, if you take the situation at face value. I've had my kid (3 yrs old) go to the store with me and want to ride one of those kiddy rides, and threw a tantrum when I didn't have quarters. Well, we left, because he wasn't going to walk around the store with me, and then it was nearly impossible to get/keep him in the car's toddler seat. There are no straps tight enough to keep a toddler in a seat if he doesn't want to be there, and forcing him down is not the solution to calming him down.

Therefore, for the airline, it was simple logic, regardless of kid or not - passenger was not in their seat, refusing to sit, they leave. Giving people options is not how airplanes work, it'd be like saying "excuse me, can you hold takeoff for a few minutes, I need to finish this important phone call."

Ok I know that lots of people are against giving their kids a little smack on the butt but trust me, it works. Yeah he/she might cry but it will learn the lesson that when you are serious about some things the kid should listen and not act like a baby.

I'm of two minds on this.

First - I agree somewhat that they were treated unfairly. They should have been given a bit of time to calm her down... at least 5-10 min. HOWEVER, the plane was late already, and this would have been a longer delay.

Second - the airline did what it needed to to make sure the plane wasn't 30 or more minutes late leaving. if an adult was being loud and obnoxious, he would be the one to blame. Now, I realize it's a 3yr old child, but, they can control their behaviour at that age, and most times, it's just a tantrum.

So I'm divided on this.

Good. The parents were being stupid and got what was coming to them. If the parents not missing work was so important to them, they would have shut up the kid immediately.

I expect there will be a multi-million dollar harassment lawsuit shortly.

Why should they offer a hotel to some moronic family that delayed their flight nearly a half hour because they don't feel like controlling their kid. I am pretty sure you can force a 3 yr old to fit in an airline seat, and if you are too soft to make ur kid do something, get the hell off the plane and quit punishing everyone around you. Complete and total ignorance. I have flew on airtran many times they are a good company, and right in what they did.

I am sure the only reason they reimbursed them and offered them free tickets is the publicity, since airlines are struggling so bad they are left with no choice, which is pretty damn sad.

Couldn't have said it better. if you kid is a retarded moron, get of the plane. If you can't control your child, give him to adoption or something, so someone more capable can teach him how to live in society.

I am stunned. Did any of you catch this line from the mother:

"Elly was sitting in front of our seat crying," she said in a phone interview. "The attendant motioned to a seat and asked if we purchased it for her."

That implys that the daughter is sitting in front of the parents. BOTH OF THEM!!! Why wouldn't these brain-dead people swap a seat with the child and put the child next to one of the parents. And I am sure, after sitting there for 15 minutes, anyone on that plane would have switched seats to allow the parent to sit next to the child.

It's a simple thing called discipline. You can bet the little brat runs rough-shot over the parents all day long. And then when they really need the child to behave, there is no precedence set by these spineless parents and they have no authority.

Way to go AirTran! They should have just bumped them to a later flight and left it at that. No money and no other tickets.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I don't use Edge, I don't even use Windows these days as my main driver. Mac these days I use and Zen browser
    • Apple releases iOS 26.5.2 with dozens of security fixes for iPhone by Karthik Mudaliar Apple has released iOS 26.5.2 and iPadOS 26.5.2, which are security-only updates for the iPhone and the iPad. The update brings a bunch of security fixes for WebKit, WebRTC, WebKit Storage, WebKit Canvas, Web Extensions, libxslt, IOGPUFamily, and even the kernel. Some of the WebKit issues that were fixed could have allowed malicious web content to disclose sensitive user information, exfiltrate cross-origin data, crash Safari, or process restricted web content outside the browser sandbox. One notable WebKit Storage bug could let a malicious website to silently hijack clipboard data, according to Apple’s description. Other WebKit-related flaws involved memory corruption, use-after-free bugs, type confusion, out-of-bounds writes, permissions problems, and cross-origin data handling issues. The update also includes three kernel-related fixes. Apple says one of the flaws could let an app write kernel memory or cause unexpected system termination, while another may leak sensitive kernel state, and a third could corrupt kernel memory or terminate the system unexpectedly. Although Apple hasn't described them as remote web attacks, kernel bugs are still important to fix, as they can sometimes be chained with other flaws to escape app or browser restrictions. The updates are available for iPhone 11 and later, iPad Pro 12.9-inch 3rd generation and later, iPad Pro 11-inch 1st generation and later, iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 8th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later. Similar security fixes also came with the latest update to macOS Tahoe 26.5.2, which Apple released on the same day. That overlap is not surprising, since Safari, WebKit, WebRTC, and other underlying components are shared across Apple’s platforms. Users are advised to update their devices sooner rather than later as these security fixes are crucial. iOS 26.5.2 can be installed from Settings > General > Software Update. Similarly, Mac users can find macOS Tahoe 26.5.2 through System Settings > General > Software Update.
    • Taken them long enough, that is one good thing. I still refuse to have a Whatsapp account, because it still need a phone number to have an account. don't want to give Meta my phone number
    • Good think I still have SDRAM and FP RAM sitting around.
    • Fitbit Charge 6 fitness tracker with Google apps is now at its lowest price with 47% off by Fiza Ali Amazon is currently offering the Fitbit Charge 6 fitness tracker at its all-time low price with a 47% discount. The device features an AMOLED touchscreen display protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 3 that should offer improved scratch resistance and durability. The Charge 6 is equipped with a range of sensors including an optical heart rate sensor, a 3-axis accelerometer, built-in GPS with GLONASS support, red and infrared sensors for SpO2 monitoring, a skin temperature sensor, an ambient light sensor, a vibration motor, NFC, and multipurpose electrical sensors compatible with the ECG and EDA Scan apps. Heart rate is recorded every second during exercise tracking and every five seconds during normal daily use. The device requires the Google Health app for setup and synchronisation. Furthermore, Bluetooth provides wireless connectivity for syncing and communication with devices running Apple iOS 16.4 or later and Android 11.0 or later. The tracker stores up to 7 days of minute-by-minute activity data and retains daily activity totals for the previous 30 days. In terms of water resistance, the Fitbit Charge 6 has a 5 ATM rating that should make it suitable for swimming and water activities. The tracker operates in temperatures ranging from 14°F to 113°F and at altitudes of up to 28,000 feet. Moreover, the included Infinity band is made from a flexible silicone material and features a loop-and-peg fastening. The small band fits wrists measuring 5.1 to 6.7 inches, while the large band fits wrists measuring 6.7 to 8.3 inches. Both small and large bands are included in the box. When it comes to battery performance, the Fitbit Charge 6 should deliver up to 7 days of battery life under typical usage conditions. Features such as the Always-On Display, built-in GPS, and SpO2 monitoring increase power consumption and may require more frequent charging. The rechargeable lithium-polymer battery should take approximately two hours to charge from empty to full. Fitbit Charge 6 Fitness Tracker with Google Apps: $85.45 (Amazon US) - 47% off Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      536
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      266
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      98
    5. 5
      macoman
      61
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!