Cells on a plane? No way, says Dianne Feinstein
With her home base in San Francisco but her day job in Washington, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California knows well the travails of air travel these days. So perhaps she can be excused for the tangent she took earlier this week when the acting administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration got hauled before a Senate subcommittee, ostensibly to talk about airline safety lapses and lax
oversight of the industry.
When it was her turn to quiz Robert Sturgell, she didn’t ask about the groundings that have left so many frustrated passengers delayed or stranded at airports the last few weeks.
What was on Feinstein's mind was cell phones, according to Times reporter James Hohmann, who was at the hearing.
Prompted by a news story she read last week, Democrat Feinstein wanted to know if America would follow Europe’s lead and allow cell phone use on commercial flights.
“I don’t know what’s going to happen if I have to listen, or anybody has to listen, to the person next to them talking loudly on their cell phone for five-and-a-half hours as we travel from Washington to San Francisco,” she said.
“I mean, I’d rather not travel,” she added. “Some people are so painfully loud on their cell phone that you know everything about them by the time they hang up.”
So, she pressed ...
the beleaguered Sturgell, “Are we going to have to listen to them cross country?”
“Senator, my top priorities are staffing and runway safety and our oversight,” he replied, adding that the cell-phone issue "is far, far, far down the list.”
For once, bureaucratic inertia was the right answer.
“So that means you’ll never get to it,” Feinstein said. “Which is fine by me!”
-- Don Frederick
Photo credit: Associated Press
Johanna Neuman is a veteran Washington correspondent for both The Los Angeles Times and USA Today, having covered presidents and politics as far back as Ronald Reagan. A former president of the White House Correspondents Assn., she authored a book on media and foreign policy, “Lights, Camera, Wars.” Most recently she was co-author of the
I haven't seen a recent photo of Sen. Feinstein in a while.
For security and safety reasons, I sincerely agree with her, "No cell phones on a plane".
My question is, how does her husband motivate himself to make love to this god-forsaken, very unattractive, ancient, yet outstanding senator?
Posted by: robinia | April 19, 2008 at 07:49 AM
When is she up for re-election anyway? She and the other senator have done nothing for us since we voted in 2006.
Posted by: Anee | April 19, 2008 at 09:46 AM
Good for the Senator. cell phone users do not have any consideration for people around them. to be trapped in a plane with cell phones being used would lead to trouble among the passengers.
Posted by: alan collins | April 19, 2008 at 10:01 AM
Just say "no" to cell phones on planes. Silence is golden.
Posted by: Holden | April 19, 2008 at 12:41 PM
ROBINIA !
I agree with your double-edged comedic comment, except for her being "outstanding"? I gather one was trying to be funny, I hope?
I'm still laughin' ! Thank goodness for blogs ! It just made my day!
Posted by: eric | April 19, 2008 at 04:38 PM
In a tri-partite deal with a New England-based seller and Herndon, VA Internet domain-name registrar Network Solutions,
networksolutions.com
suburban New York anti-FAA aero-activist group Quiet Rockland today announced its acquisition of the 3 most critical Internet Uniform Resource Locator (URL) domain-names relating to failed FAA Acting Administrator Robert Allan (“Bobby”) Sturgell:
bobbysturgell.com
bobbysturgell.org
bobbysturgell.net
Posted by: John J. Tormey III, Esq. | September 28, 2008 at 05:33 PM