National Post

‘I felt like we were luggage’

PASSENGERS IN HOURS-LONG AIR TRANSAT TARMAC DELAYS DESCRIBE DISTRESS

- in Ottawa Jordan Press

Passengers who were trapped aboard two Air Transat jets in Ottawa this summer described hours on end of sweltering heat, a lack of water and the stench of vomit in the cabin while flight attendants were seen outside taking selfies.

As a federal agency began hearings Wednesday into their ordeal, passengers spoke of widespread confusion over the July 31 delays — six hours in one case, five in the other.

One witness said she saw flight attendants outside on the tarmac taking photograph­s of themselves alongside one of the stranded planes.

Another witness described a young boy running down the aisle for the toilets in the rear of the plane, but vomiting in the aisle and on passengers before he could make it to the bathrooms.

One by one, passengers told members of the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency, the agency investigat­ing the incidents, that they would have given anything to be allowed off the planes, even if only to face further delays or long drives home.

They described feeling as if they were being treated like cargo by the airline, rather than as human beings, and accused the carrier of being more concerned about getting the planes in the air than it was about the health and safety of its customers.

“There was no relief,” passenger Alan Abraham told the panel. “I felt like we were luggage; they had to get us to Montreal no matter what. They didn’t care what condition we were in.”

The ensuing weeks have seen finger- pointing between the airline and airport officials in the national capital over the incident, which is now subject of a class- action lawsuit.

“Air Transat said that it’s the airport of Ottawa, and Ottawa airport says it is Air Transat who didn’t ask for help,” said Blaise Pascal Irutingabo, one of the pas- sengers who endured trying conditions during a six-hour delay. “As a passenger, we don’t know who to blame or who to talk to about what happened.”

Wednesday’s testimony marked the first of two days of hearings into whether the airline broke its contract with passengers.

“Air travel is an integral part of modern life,” said Scott Steiner, chair and CEO of the agency. “Usually it goes smoothly, but if it doesn’t, passengers have rights.”

Senior Air Transat officials are scheduled to testify Thursday. On Wednesday, Christophe Hennebelle, the airline’s vice- president of corporate affairs, offered an apology to passengers, saying the hearings showed the complexity of the situation on July 31.

“We are very aware of the difficult situation that has been experience­d by our passengers. We have made our apologies for that and we apologize again,” Hennebelle said in a short statement to reporters.

Both planes were origin- ally bound for Montreal — one from Brussels, the other from Rome — but were forced to divert to Ottawa due to weather conditions. They were among about 20 other planes that couldn’t land in Montreal or Toronto during a two-hour window.

The two planes sat on the tarmac for hours, with the air conditioni­ng failing on the Brussels flight after it ran out of fuel despite declaring a fuel emergency before landing.

Outdoor temperatur­es hovered around 28 C.

The passengers said they were told repeatedly that they were not allowed off the planes because customs agents refused to allow it, even after food and beverages ran out.

The airport authority said gates were available if Air Transat pilots wanted to let passengers disembark and rejected suggestion­s that it helped other planes refuel while neglecting Air Transat.

Airport authority CEO Marc Laroche s ai d t he ground services agency is responsibl­e for stairs to let people off planes and refuelling services, arguing the airport is not responsibl­e for the issue at the heart of these hearings.

“I hope that Air Tran- sat will be clear to everyone what they are responsibl­e for: They are responsibl­e for refuelling, catering, decision to gate or to deplane, those are their responsibi­lities. I provide the infrastruc­ture, the facility, the co-ordination centre,” Laroche said.

The backdrop to the hearings is the federal government’s proposed air passenger bill of rights, which it hopes to have made law by the end of the year.

Hearings on t he bill, known as C- 49, will start before the House of Commons officially resumes sitting after its summer break.

 ?? JEAN LEVAC / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Alan Abraham and his wife Pat were witnesses at Wednesday’s hearing.
JEAN LEVAC / POSTMEDIA NEWS Alan Abraham and his wife Pat were witnesses at Wednesday’s hearing.

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