Calgary Herald

Don’t drag passengers off planes: Garneau

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA • Transport Minister Marc Garneau issued a warning Thursday to all airlines operating in Canada: forcibly removing passengers from overbooked airplanes will not be tolerated.

Garneau sent a letter to every airline that flies in the country to warn that an incident like the one that injured an American doctor in Chicago earlier this week is not to happen in Canada.

“I am sure that you were as disturbed as I was, and as all Canadians were, over the appalling incident that took place on-board a United flight earlier this week, when a passenger was forcibly removed from his seat,” he wrote. “I am writing to you today to convey that such an incident would be unacceptab­le in Canada.”

The warning goes out not just to Canadian airlines such as Air Canada and WestJet, but also to internatio­nal airlines that fly in Canada — which includes United Airlines.

The letter comes five days after David Dao, 69, was dragged off a United flight after refusing to leave his seat to accommodat­e airline crew members. He suffered a concussion, a broken nose and two missing teeth when security officers forced him off the plane against his will, banging his head on armrests in the process.

The incident spawned outrage from already frazzled airline passengers. United CEO Oscar Munoz compounded the blowback when he initially appeared to blame Dao for the incident, accusing him of being belligeren­t.

Munoz has since called Dao directly to apologize and issued a notice to United employees that passengers must not be forced off airplanes except for security reasons.

Passenger rights advocate Gabor Lukacs said the warning from Garneau is meaningles­s because there is nothing the government can do if the airlines don’t comply.

“The reality is if this were to happen in Canada there would be no recourse,” said Lukacs.

Westjet Airlines spokeswoma­n Lauren Stewart acknowledg­ed the company received the letter and following it would not be an issue.

“As a policy, WestJet does not deliberate­ly overbook our flights,” she said in an email.

Air Canada spokesman Peter Fitzpatric­k said his airline co-operates with the government “on all matters.”

“With respect to over sales, it is important to note we are very conservati­ve in our approach so it is rare that a flight is overbooked,” Fitzpatric­k said. “In these instances we usually find volunteers to travel on the next flight and any decisions are made before final seats are assigned and customers board the aircraft.”

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