When a plane crashes where do you bury the survivors?
A plane crashes on the border of the US and Canada. Where do they bury the survivors? YOu don't bury the SURVIVORS! You are on the bank of a river.
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The airline will likely contact you to arrange for you to retrieve the personal effects of your loved one. The airline representatives might sound sincere, offer to make travel arrangements to the site of the crash and other details. In the process, the officials will likely ask to interview family members.
Some passengers may suffer permanent brain damage that prevents them from working or living independently. Broken bones. Even a so-called minor accident can cause extremely painful fractures in a passenger's hands, feet, arms, legs, or ribs. Back injuries.
How much does an airline pay for death in USA? According to Article 21 of the Montreal Convention, in case of death of passengers, the airline is liable to pay up to 1,13,100 Special Drawing Rights for each passenger. This works out to approximately $1,74,000 at current rates.
They will first lose consciousness. Brain damage can begin within a minute or two of total oxygen deprivation, according to spinalcord.com. Five minutes after the loss of oxygen, death of brain cells and severe brain damage will happen.
The airline can be sued for the wrongful death of the passenger. In general, the family can recover financial compensation, known as “damages,” for loss of support, and children can recover for loss of a parent's nurture, care and guidance.
This is why airlines have a nickname for dead bodies, so that they can fly undetected — they're called “Jim Wilson.” According to Sara Marsden, the Editor in Chief for US Funerals Online, American Airlines even have a dedicated help desk for funeral homes that they call the American Airlines Jim Wilson Service.
However, statistically speaking, a seat close to an exit in the front or rear, or a middle seat in the back third of the plane offers the lowest fatality rate. That said, flying is still the safest form of transport.
September 24, 2023A single-engine Beechcraft BE23 crashed in a field near Roger M Dreyer Memorial Airport in Gonzales, Texas, around 7:30 p.m. local time on Saturday, September 24. Only the pilot was on board. The FAA and NTSB will investigate.