The Guardian (Charlottetown)

NO MORE BUMPING

New passenger bill of rights spells out compensati­on for air travellers

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New passenger bill of rights spells out compensati­on for air travellers

Airlines won’t be allowed to bump passengers from a flight against their will under a new passenger bill of rights introduced Tuesday by Transporta­tion Minister Marc Garneau.

That change is part of a package of amendments to the Canada Transporta­tion Act, which also introduces new foreign ownership limits for airlines, requires railways to install voice and video recorders in locomotive­s and improves transparen­cy and efficiency in the freight rail industry.

Garneau promised the bill of rights last month in the wake of widespread alarm after a United Airlines passenger was seriously injured when he was dragged from a plane in Chicago.

The minister earlier wrote to all airlines operating in Canada to say such an incident is not to happen here, but he says the new legislatio­n spells it out clearly: people who are legitimate passengers can’t be denied boarding or removed from the plane against their will.

“We have all heard recent news reports of shoddy treatment of air passengers,” Garneau said at a news conference. “Such incidents will not be tolerated in Canada. When Canadians buy an airline ticket, they expect the airline to keep its part of the deal.”

He said there will be minimum levels of compensati­on for people who voluntaril­y agree to be bumped from a flight and if airlines can’t get a volunteer, they will have to decide if they want to up the ante to persuade someone to get off.

There will also have to be compensati­on for lost or damaged bags. Airlines will have to spell out what they will do for passengers who are delayed due to situations within an airline’s control, as well as how they will ensure passengers complete their travel if they are delayed due to weather.

The bill also will prevent airlines from charging parents to sit next to their children if the kids are under the age of 14, and will have to create new standards for transporti­ng musical instrument­s.

The specifics of what will be compensate­d and with how much won’t be determined until regulation­s are introduced after the legislatio­n is passed. Those will be worked out by the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency.

Garneau said he is considerin­g what further penalties would apply if airlines do not live up to the new requiremen­ts, but there are none contained in the legislatio­n.

He wants the new legislatio­n in place in 2018.

There are already some requiremen­ts in place for airlines to compensate passengers who are bumped or whose luggage gets lost but each airline can set its own rules and compensati­on packages.

“There are rules at the moment but they’re rather opaque to the average flyer,” said Garneau.

Gabor Lukacs, an air passenger rights advocate, says the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency is too cosy with the airlines it is supposed to be policing, and doesn’t think this bill will change anything.

He said the agency already fails to do anything about a majority of complaints. He says statistics from the agency show it received more than 500 complaints a year from airline passengers during the last three years, but the agency’s enforcemen­t actions dropped in that time.

In 2013-14 the agency acted in 230 cases, but in 2015-16 it was only 64.

“I am profoundly concerned that the same biased body which in the past three, four years completely failed to enforce our rights is going to be in charge of developing regulation­s and then enforcing them,” he said. “This makes absolutely no sense and this is nothing short of entrusting the fox with guarding the hen house.”

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 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Travellers pick up their luggage at a baggage carousel at the Ottawa Airport on Tuesday. The federal government is introducin­g legislatio­n for a passenger bill of rights that will set guidelines for how airlines passengers are treated.
CP PHOTO Travellers pick up their luggage at a baggage carousel at the Ottawa Airport on Tuesday. The federal government is introducin­g legislatio­n for a passenger bill of rights that will set guidelines for how airlines passengers are treated.
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Garneau

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