• United Airlines goes cashless (by Associated Press)
    United Airlines will start accepting credit and debit cards for onboard purchases beginning March 23.

    United said it will stop accepting cash for purchases on flights within the U.S. and on flights to and from Canada, Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean after the spring break season. No firm date has been set for the changeover.


  • US Airways not to charge for water and soda
    US Airways Group has decided to stop charging for nonalcoholic drinks in its coach cabin.

    Charging for beverages began in August and lasted about six months.

    Last year, the carrier adopted an a la carte model, charging customers for checked baggage, choice seats and pillows. That helped to raise cash for record fuel bills without jacking up airfares in an ultracompetitive business. But US Airways broke from the pack in deciding to also charge for water, sodas and tea, and that apparently went too far and passenger complaints became a distraction. The airline is dropping the policy.


  • Passport Cards Proving Popular
    Nearly 740,000 Americans have ordered passport cards, a new document being offered by the State Department to speed border crossings by U.S. citizens traveling to Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean.

    Beginning in June 2009, travelers will be required to present documents proving both citizenship and identity when entering the U.S. through a land or sea border. For Americans who drive to Canada or Mexico or cruise regularly to the Caribbean, but who do not expect to fly abroad, the passport card is a cheaper, smaller, more portable alternative to a conventional passport book.

    The card is especially popular with Americans who live in border states where it's not unusual to drive back and forth to Canada or Mexico. Residents of four border states — Texas, California, Michigan and New York — lead the country in the number of residents holding passport cards, according to Rima J. Vydmantas, spokeswoman for the State Department's Consular Affairs Bureau.

    The passport card is the size of a credit card or driver's license, and has a photo and identification information printed on it, like a driver's license. It also contains a chip with a unique number that allows border officials to instantly retrieve your data from a government database.

    It's not valid for air travel.

    Passport cards are good for 10 years and cost $45 ($35 for children under 16). Applications can be made at any passport-processing site. If you already have a passport but want the card anyway because of the convenient size or quick scanning, it's only $20 and can be ordered by mail.

    For details on how and where to get a passport card, visit http://www.travel.state.gov.

    Processing time for applications for both passport books and passport cards is about three weeks for routine applications. Expedited service is not available for passport cards, but for passport books, expedited service takes about two weeks.