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Southwest Airlines begins flying the first plane with a secondary cockpit barrier

Southwest Airlines announced that it would begin flying on Friday its first jet equipped with a secondary flight deck barrier designed to prevent intrusions.

The airline announced that the plane, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 recently delivered to them, will take its first flight from Phoenix to Salt Lake City on Friday afternoon.

Pilots unions argue that secondary barriers are essential to aviation safety. They have been sought since the September 11, 2001 attacks, which exposed the dangers of insufficient flight detection protection.

This flight marks the start of the deployment of this safety feature on the new U.S. commercial aircraft fleet over the next few years.

Boeing and Airbus have said they've begun delivering planes with barriers underneath.

Regulation announced for 2023

This took effect on the Monday.

The Federal Aviation Administration has agreed to a new agreement.

Give airlines until July 2026

Use the barrier in new planes. The FAA has been informed by the majority of major carriers that they will not be using the barriers immediately and instead, take advantage the extension.

Southwest Airlines has chosen to comply with the new regulations as soon as it takes delivery of new aircraft. It expects to receive about 25 more Boeing planes in this year, which will be equipped with the barrier.

The FAA adopted security standards for the flight deck after the September 11 hijackings of four U.S. planes. These standards are designed to prevent forcible entry and unauthorized access.

The rule requires that aircraft manufacturers install a second physical barricade on all new planes in use for commercial passenger services in the United States. Existing planes do not have to be retrofitted.

(source: Reuters)