The Daily Courier

B.C. MP tables bill to increase airline passenger protection

- By KAITLYN BAILEY

After a series of cancelled Prince Rupert flights, NDP Transporta­tion Critic and Skeena-Bulkley Valley MP Taylor Bachrach, presented a new bill to the House of Commons on March 20 that addresses airline passenger protection.

The private member’s bill, called Strengthen­ing Air Passenger Protection, would force airlines to pay travellers compensati­on without delay and would put the onus on the airline to prove when cancellati­ons are out of their control.

“The current system favours the airline because it’s so difficult for passengers to actually get the money they’re owed,” Bachrach said.

“We want to flip the script on that and make compensati­on the norm rather than the exception.”

Air passenger compensati­on requiremen­ts are laid out in the Canadian Transporta­tion Act.

Currently, the act lists three types of disruption­s – disruption­s that are outside of an airline’s control, disruption­s that are inside an airline’s control and disruption­s that are inside an airline’s control but are required for safety.

“It’s that third category that airlines have been using to deny passengers compensati­on,” Bachrach said.

Bachrach’s proposed bill suggests scrapping the current classifica­tion system and moving to just two categories – ordinary disruption­s and extraordin­ary disruption­s – with airlines being required to compensate customers for the former but not the latter.

Ordinary disruption­s refer to anything the airline could have prevented through regular operation by doing things such as proper maintenanc­e and ensuring there is enough crew available to fly the plane. Something like a major winter storm would fall under the extraordin­ary disruption category.

This is the system that the European Union uses, Bachrach said.

Paired with changes to the act, which would require airlines to provide compensati­on right away and to prove if the cancellati­on was due to extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, passengers would not have to jump through as many hoops to be recompense­d after their flights are cancelled.

“What’s happening now is that airlines typically deny passenger’s requests for compensati­on under the Air Passenger Protection Regime, forcing them to go through the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency complaint process, which involves a bunch of steps. Only a small fraction of affected passengers have the fortitude to navigate that much bureaucrac­y to pursue compensati­on.”

According to the NDP, the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency has more than 42,000 complaints backlogged, which they have said will take more than 18 months to get to.

Bachrach’s bill also proposes increasing the maximum financial penalties when airlines do not abide by the Canadian Transporta­tion Act.

“The Canadian Transporta­tion Agency rarely fines the airlines and when it does, it’s for such paltry amounts that it doesn’t really serve as a deterrent for future behaviour,” the MP said.

“As long as the cost of following the rules is greater than the cost of breaking them, we’re going to see companies making that choice.”

The NDP transporta­tion critic would like to see the Liberal Party bring it forward as a government bill so it can be passed more quickly.

“It can take quite a bit of time for a private member’s bill to come forward for debate, but what I wanted to do in tabling this bill was to articulate in legislatio­n the changes that consumer advocates can be calling for,” he said.

Specifical­ly, Bachrach said he worked with Air Passenger Rights, Public Interest Advocacy Centre and Option Consommate­urs to draft the bill.

“Our message to the minister is steal our homework.

“This isn’t about taking credit. It’s about protecting Canadian travellers and I hope he’ll act on that message as quickly as possible.”

 ?? ?? The Canadian Press
NDP MP Taylor Bachrach speaks during a news conference on Parliament Hill.
The Canadian Press NDP MP Taylor Bachrach speaks during a news conference on Parliament Hill.

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