Airline Passengers Are Finding 'Creative Ways' To Remove Masks, American Pilot Says

American Airlines pilot Dennis Tajer has taken several flights during the coronavirus pandemic, both in the cockpit and as a union official, and has noticed something unsettling lately: passengers removing their masks for more than eating or drinking.

American Airlines pilot Dennis Tajer has taken several flights during the coronavirus pandemic, both in the cockpit and as a union official, and has noticed something unsettling lately: passengers removing their masks for more than eating or drinking.

"We're starting to see people take creative ways on the aircraft of temporary relief from wearing the masks," he said in an interview Thursday on CNBC's "Squawk Box."

"You see it drop down over the nose. Or you might see it used as more of a chin guard," he said.

Tajer, spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association, doesn't think the moves are malicious but "just natural human reactions."

Fed up: Passenger walks off Allegiant flight due to lax mask usage

He said that while most passengers are complying with American's requirement to wear masks throughout the flight to thwart the spread of coronavirus, some are being lax. But without a federal mask mandate on planes it's hard for flight attendants to force compliance.

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