Daily Life

Save
Print
License article

Two teens barred from US flight for wearing leggings

  • 29 reading now

Two girls were barred from flying on a United Airlines flight in the US from Denver to Minneapolis on Sunday because they were wearing leggings.

A third girl, aged 10, wearing grey leggings had to cover herself with a dress before she was allowed to board the flight by the gate agent.

Shannon Watts, founder of the anti-gun violence organisation Moms Demand Action, was boarding the flight and started to tweet about the incident.

United Airlines responded: "United shall have the right to refuse passengers who are not properly clothed via our Contract of Carriage." They added, " This is left to the discretion of the agents."

The airline's passenger contract says for the safety of all passengers and crew members, the airline can refuse to let a passenger on board if the passengers is "barefoot or not properly clothed."

However, there is no definition for "properly clothed".

United Airlines spokesman Jonathan Guerin confirmed to The Washington Post the two teens were not allowed on the flight. But he said the girls were travelling using a United employee pass and "were not in compliance with our dress code policy for company benefit travel".

"Our regular passengers are not going to be denied boarding because they are wearing leggings or yoga pants," Guerin said. "But when flying as a pass traveller we require them to follow rules and that is one of those rules.

"They were not compliant with the dress policy with the benefit," Guerin said. "This morning the attire of the pass travellers on this flight didn't meet the dress code policy."

The airline seemed to hit a cog in the wheel when they could not explain why it was inappropriate for a 10-year-old to dress in leggings.

The story trended on Twitter with celebrities like Chrissy Teigen, Patricia Arquette and even William Shatner responding to United's outdated policies.

A number of people promised to boycott the airline, including American comedian Sarah Silverman:​

Other social media users started to share their own experiences of being made feel "embarrassed" or "sexualised" for the first time because of what they wore. 

While others mocked United.

In 2016 a woman on a JetBlue flight from Boston to Seattle said she was asked by airline to staff to cover up before she boarded the plane.