The Standard (St. Catharines)

Bias suspected at transport regulator

Email reveals board members greenlit regulator’s stance on travel vouchers over refunds

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

Questions about potential bias at the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency came to the fore this week after a government official acknowledg­ed that CTA board members greenlit the regulator’s stance in favour of travel vouchers over refunds.

Transport Canada policy adviser Blake Oliver said in an Oct. 5 email to Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine- Smith that the agency’s members, vice-chair and chair would have approved its statement on vouchers, which has been cited by airlines and financial institutio­ns to refuse reimbursem­ents and chargeback­s.

The March 25 statement said vouchers or flight credits — as opposed to refunds — for travellers generally amount to an appropriat­e response by airlines following flight cancellati­ons prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Since then, the CTA has received more than 8,000 complaints, some of which are likely to come before board members for adjudicati­ons on refund claims.

The agency’s code of conduct says board members should not express an opinion about potential cases in order to avoid creating “a reasonable apprehensi­on of bias.”

The agency has said the statement on vouchers is not legally binding and was posted in light of the risk that some passengers would receive nothing at all following a cancelled flight and amid the “severe liquidity crisis” facing airlines.

Erskine- Smith agreed to share the email, which he sent at the request of the Air Passenger Rights advocacy group.

CTA members who endorsed a statement that comes down on one side of a dispute now arising in thousands of complaints could be seen as biased when overseeing the adjudicati­ons that those complaints would result in, said Air Passenger Rights founder Gabor Lukacs.

“A judge cannot comment on a case that is before them or likely to come before them. If they do, it is likely to create a reasonable apprehensi­on of bias,” Lukacs said, drawing a comparison with the CTA board.

“They have pronounced their views without hearing evidence, without hearing both sides,” he said. “Effectivel­y they are already discouragi­ng people from pursuing their rights.”

The CTA disagrees with that view.

Last week, a Federal Court of Appeal judge dismissed an attempt by the regulator to prevent a hearing on its voucher statement after Air Passenger Rights asked the court in April to order its removal from the website.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada