My seatmate needs to get up every 15 mins. What ought the cabin crew do?

My seatmate needs to get up every 15 mins. What ought the cabin crew do? - Back view of positive young female traveler in casual wear and headset sitting in cockpit of modern helicopter during flight over coastal town

For an Air Canada ("AC") flight, my grandma booked the aisle seat in a column with 2-seat configuration in Economy class. Her only seatmate kept getting up every 15 mins. This is too inconvenient for my grandma, who was hoping to nap. So she tried to negotiate:

She: Sorry to bother you. Will you be getting up a lot?
He: Yes sorry. I need to use the bathroom.
She: Would you like to change seats then?
He: No thanks. I prefer the window seat.

She asked the Service Director (AC's term for purser) for help, but Director said there were no other seats in economy class. She then asked for a seat in another class, but Director apologised and stressed that he can't elevate to other classes in this case. In effect, Director did nothing.

How could my grandma have convinced them to let her sit in another class?

EDIT: Some comments recommend booking a window seat, but my grandma can't righteously do this as she needs to get up regularly too, to stretch, (not every 15 mins. though). She prefers the window seat only if the seatmate gets up more than she, and this is the first time that happened.



Best Answer

As @gsamaras says, there is nothing the cabin crew can or should do. However I do think your grandma was a little passive. Her asking "Would you like to change seats?" indicates that it's no bother to her, she's just asking for the other person's convenience.

What would be worth trying, after the exchange in the question is for her to say:

Actually it's very inconvenient for me if I have to get up and let you out every fifteen minutes. I'm hoping to sleep. I think it would be much better for both of us if we changed seats.




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More answers regarding my seatmate needs to get up every 15 mins. What ought the cabin crew do?

Answer 2

The crux of the question is when can a customer, in economy class, ask to be upgraded. In which situations?

How could {I / my spouse / we / any kin} have convinced them to let {me/her/him/us} sit in another class?

First and foremost, it seems that the OP should tell their family members that being upgraded to a seat due to an inconvenience is the exception, not the rule. If it were so easy to be upgraded then passengers would ask to be moved whenever they are seated near or next to…

  1. a colicky baby, or a child that is crying (screaming) for longer than ten minutes
  2. a co-passenger who has a very bad cold and/or seems feverish
  3. someone who never stops talking
  4. who snores in their sleep
  5. who is morbidly obese
  6. who uses both armrests
  7. who nods off to sleep on your shoulder
  8. who spreads their legs and/or invades your space (AKA “seat hogging”)
  9. who wears too much perfume/cologne/aftershave
  10. who leans over, repeatedly, in order to look outside the window.
  11. who is never off their mobile
  12. who takes off their shoes and puts their feet up
  13. who clips their toenails
  14. who picks their nose and inspects their snot
  15. who loudly unwraps sweets and/or sucks or chews gum noisily
  16. who brings smelly food from home to eat on the plane
  17. who picks their teeth
  18. teenagers (and non) who play games on their tablets with the sound on
  19. who unpacks their carryon because they're looking for their reading glasses/a book/nail clippers etc.
  20. who continually needs to visit the toilet/restroom

In all the above scenarios, the only thing a hapless traveller can hope for is to ask the offender to be more considerate (excluding the obese seatmate or the ill passenger) and/or to talk to one of the flight attendants on board and hope they can find a solution. And sometimes there is no solution, there is no remedy. You just have to suck it up.


When can you get an upgrade? Is answered here:
What techniques, tricks or otherwise have you used to get upgrades on flights?

And can you sneak into first/business class is answered here:
What are the chances of success and the consequences of sneaking into business class?

Answer 3

You don't have to get up every 15 minutes. If they have to go to the restroom every 15 minutes, then that is their problem, not yours. If they do not want to cooperate, that is also their problem.

FYI, you are obliged to follow crew instructions, not passenger instructions.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Maarten van den Heuvel, Ricardo Esquivel, Kelly L, SpaceX