Has it come to this? How bad do companies need the extra money? One could possibly sue for getting a urinary tract infection too, and the toilets would take credit cards too. This reminds me of a post I did not too long ago:
Union Workers told to use urine bags
The supervisor tried to enforce employees taking urine bags with them, so if we have pay toilets on planes, will everyone just drag out their urine bag? This could make for some interesting flights. A number of years ago I believe it was Alaska Airlines that made a commercial about this, mocking the no frills that could come to pass with other airlines. BD
What is the real price of flying cheap? It might be a urinary tract infection if you're flying with Ryanair and don't want to pay to use a toilet onboard. Ryanair Chief Executive Michael O'Leary said on a BBC morning show that the airline is looking into charging its passengers £1 (about $1.43) to use the loo. The airline would install devices on toilet doors to accept both coins and credit cards.
But U.K. urologist Christopher Ogden doubted whether going without goes for this "cost-cutting measure," as some passengers can't avoid a lavatory visit when flying for a few hours. "You could get a urinary tract infection if you hold up urine long enough, especially when you're susceptible to it.
0 comments :
Post a Comment