Penticton Herald

Compensati­ng passengers for flight disruption­s not enough

- By AMANDA STEPHENSON

CALGARY – A consumer advocate says two recent regulatory rulings ordering Canadian airlines to compensate passengers for flight disruption­s won’t be enough to improve air travel in this country.

In an interview, Gabor Lukacs – founder of the advocacy group Air Passenger Rights – said the separate decisions this summer by the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency (CTA) in favour of passengers who had flights cancelled due to crew shortages only serve to paper over the complaints of thousands of Canadians who have suffered through airport backlogs and flight delays in the past year.

“These two rulings are isolated and exceptiona­l incidents of the CTA doing what it is supposed to do,” Lukacs said.

“These two decisions (serve as) helpful case law for passengers who take airlines to small claims court instead of wasting months or years waiting for the CTA. They offer no meaningful remedy to passengers who put their hope in the CTA, though.”

In August, the CTA – a quasijudic­ial tribunal – ordered Air Canada to pay $1,000 each to Lisa Crawford and her son, who had their August 2021 flights from Fort St. John, B.C. to Halifax delayed by 16 hours.

Earlier in the summer, the CTA also ordered WestJet to pay $1,000 to a passenger whose cancelled flight from Ottawa in July 2021 meant he arrived at his destinatio­n in Regina, Sask. 21 hours later than scheduled.

In both decisions, the CTA ruled that staffing shortages are the responsibi­lity of the airline, and not a safety issue as the airlines had argued. Under Canada’s Air Passenger Protection Regulation­s, airlines only have to compensate passengers for delayed and cancelled flights if the reason for the disruption is within the

airline’s control.

WestJet has filed a notice of motion indicating its intent to appeal the decision, while Air Canada has said it is still reviewing the CTA ruling. Both airlines declined to comment further on the matter.

But Lukacs said the CTA currently has a backlog of thousands of complaints by Canadians affected by pandemicer­a flight cancellati­ons and delays. He said while compensati­on is one thing, what the CTA should really

be doing is imposing stiff monetary penalties on airlines for failing to comply with Canada’s air passenger protection legislatio­n.

The federal transporta­tion regulator unveiled the original Air Passenger Protection Regulation­s in 2019, outlining how airlines must communicat­e and reimburse or compensate travellers for everything from delayed flights to damaged luggage. There were exemptions, however, for delays and cancellati­ons outside of the airline’s control such as major weather events – or a pandemic.

Updated guidelines introduced earlier this month are an attempt by the federal government to close a loophole that left some passengers unable to secure cash refunds after pandemic-related flight delays and cancellati­ons. Now, airlines will be required to issue a full refund for cancellati­ons and delays if passengers are not placed on a new flight within 48 hours, including for reasons outside of the airline’s control.

“These new requiremen­ts were developed in a manner that is fair and reasonable to passengers, with the goal of not imposing an undue financial burden on air carriers that could result in higher travel costs,” said federal Transport Minister Omar Alghabra.

Air Canada stated in a court filing that the required payments under the country’s new air passenger bill of rights violate internatio­nal standards and should be rendered invalid.

 ?? If ?? The Canadian Press
Under new guidelines airlines must issue a full refund for delays passengers are not placed on a new flight within 48 hours.
If The Canadian Press Under new guidelines airlines must issue a full refund for delays passengers are not placed on a new flight within 48 hours.

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