Horizon's Loss is Southwest's Gain
I just got off the phone with Horizon
Air's customer service. I was trying to book a flight to Los
Angeles, and was having trouble arranging for accommodative
seating.
The FAA regulations state that a service animal may not sit in an
emergency exit row. Unfortunately, the planes Horizon operates in
this particular market don't have bulkhead or first-class seats;
instead, the forward-most seats are coach-class emergency exit
rows, so Glindy and I may not sit there. This would seem to
technically violate 14 CFR 382.38(a)(3), but I'm not sure how much
hay one could make of that.
The Air Carrier Access Act also says that an airline must either
block seats or provide priority seating for disabled passengers,
but the ways they can go about it are often unfriendly. Horizon
handles this situation by requiring disabled passengers to check in
early, and ask the ticketing or gate agents to arrange for blocking
or rearrangement of seats. This method may meet the requirements of
the seating assignments section (14 CFR 382.38(b)), but leaves some
edge cases where one is likely to have to involve a Complaints
Resolution Official (14 CFR 382.65).
What this means in practice is that Horizon will do its best, but
it is certainly possible to be bumped from a flight under certain
circumstances. For example, if the flight is completely full and no
one is willing to share foot-space with your dog, you might be out
of luck, as a carrier isn't required to furnish more than
one seat per ticket (14 CFR 382.38(i)) or bump other passengers to
provide an accommodation (14 CFR 382.38(h)).
Whether or not Horizon is meeting the requirement to adequately
disclose limitations on accommodation (14 CFR 382.45) remains an
open question in my mind, but Horizon is unfortunately within the
law in how they choose to assign seats in this case.
In the end, I cancelled my Horizon Air reservation, and booked on
Southwest instead, since Southwest does provide bulkhead
seats to disabled passengers. In addition, Southwest's reservation
system now allows passengers to indicate, at the time of booking,
that they will be travelling with either a service dog or emotional
support animal. This is a huge step forward, in my opinion; it
certainly saves the hassle of having to contact the airlines after
making the reservation to have the ticket annotated.
Well, Horizon's loss was Southwest's gain. I would prefer having
assigned seats on a plusher plane such as those Horizon Air
operates, but I vastly prefer Southwest's accommodation
practices.