Air Canada apologizes for bumping child
March break vacation turned into misadventure for P.E.I. family
Air Canada has apologized to a Prince Edward Island family after the airline bumped a 10-year-old boy from a flight.
Brett Doyle booked four tickets from Charlottetown to Costa Rica for his family last August.
A day before their March break vacation, Doyle said he tried to check in his family online, but he could not select a seat for his son.
After hours on the phone with Air Canada, Doyle’s wife drove to the airport and was told the flight was oversold and their son had been bumped.
The family then drove to Moncton to catch a different Air Canada flight to meet the Costa Rica flight in Montreal, but when that flight was cancelled they were forced to drive to Halifax and stay overnight in a hotel.
Air Canada said in an email it has apologized to the Doyle family.
“We are currently following up to understand what went wrong and have apologized to Mr. Doyle and his family as well as offered a very generous compensation to the family for their inconvenience,” Air Canada spokeswoman Isabelle Arthur said in an email Monday.
Doyle said he was offered a $2,500 voucher, which expires in one year, and was told Air Canada may cover his expenses.
The family’s misadventure underscores the airline industry’s controversial practice of overselling flights and bumping passengers.
Last week, a United Airlines passenger was dragged off an oversold plane in Chicago after he refused to be bumped from the flight. The violent incident, captured by cellphone cameras and shared through social media, sparked a wave of outrage.
In the P.E.I. family’s case, Doyle said an Air Canada agent told him at the airport that the plane only had 28 seats, but 34 tickets had been sold.