Toronto Star

Limit raised for bumped passengers

United flyers forced to give seat can now receive up to $10,000

- DAVID KOENIG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS— United Airlines says it will raise the limit — to $10,000 — on payments to customers who give up seats on oversold flights and will increase training for employees as it deals with fallout from the video of a passenger being violently dragged from his seat.

United is also vowing to reduce, but not eliminate, overbookin­g — the selling of more tickets than there are seats on the plane.

The airline made the promises Thursday as it released a report detailing mistakes that led to the April 9 incident on a United Express plane in Chicago.

United isn’t saying whether ticket sales have dropped since the removal of a 69-year-old passenger by three airport security officers, but the airline’s CEO admits it could be damaging.

“I breached public trust with this event and how we responded,” Oscar Munoz told The Associated Press. “People are upset, and I suspect that there are a lot of people potentiall­y thinking of not flying (with) us.” To head off customer defections, United had already announced that it will no longer call police to remove passengers from overbooked flights and will require airline crews travelling for work to check in sooner.

On Thursday, it added several other new policies including:

Raising the limit on compensati­on to $10,000 for customers who give up their

“People are upset, and I suspect that there are a lot of people potentiall­y thinking of not flying (with) us.” OSCAR MUNOZ UNITED AIRLINES CEO

seats starting Friday. That is a maximum — it’s unclear how many, if any, passengers would see that much. The current limit is $1,350. Delta Air Lines earlier this month raised its limit to $9,950.

Sending displaced passengers or crew members to nearby airports, putting them on other airlines or arranging for car transporta­tion to get them to their destinatio­ns.

Giving gate agents annual refresher training in dealing with oversold flights. Munoz said he also wants agents and flight attendants to get more help at deescalati­ng tense situations.

While not a factor in this month’s incident, United also said that starting in June, it will pay customers $1,500 with no questions asked if the airline loses their bag.

For United, the timing of the viral video could hardly have been worse.

The airline struggled badly after a 2010 merger with Continenta­l, enduring several technology breakdowns that angered customers.

In the past year, however, the airline has flown more on-time flights and lost fewer bags.

It recently rolled out plans for expanding service this summer.

Instead of being commended for those signs of progress, however, it has faced more than two weeks of withering criticism and mockery.

David Dao, the passenger injured when he was yanked from his seat, is almost certain to file a lawsuit.

Munoz apologized again and faulted his own initial response, in which he defended airline employees and called Dao belligeren­t.

“That first response was insensitiv­e beyond belief,” Munoz said. “It did not represent how I felt,” saying that he got “caught up in facts and circumstan­ces” that weren’t initially clear, instead of expressing his shock.

On Thursday, Thomas Demetrio, Dao’s attorney, said in a statement that the policy changes “are passenger-friendly and are simple, common sense decisions on United’s part to help minimize the stress involved in the flying experience.”

In Thursday’s report, United provided new details about the incident.

It said Flight 3411 to Louisville, Ky., was oversold by one ticket, but a volunteer gave up his seat.

After passengers had boarded, four crew members of Republic Airline, which operates many United Express flights, showed up late after their Louisville-bound plane had been delayed by a mechanical problem.

United said it was a mistake to let the Republic crew board late, which required removing four paying passengers, calling officers when there was no safety or security issue and not offering enough money to entice volunteers to give up their seats.

“We could have spent a lot of $10,000s and made that thing right,” Munoz said.

United said it will reduce overbookin­g, particular­ly on flights with a poor track record of finding volunteers to give up their seats, but won’t end the practice.

Munoz said if airlines can’t overbook, there will be more empty seats

“The first response was insensitiv­e beyond belief. It did not represent how I felt.” OSCAR MUNOZ UNITED AIRLINES CEO

and fares will rise.

Delta CEO Ed Bastian called oversellin­g flights “a valid business process.”

Politician­s in Washington and elsewhere have called for a ban on oversellin­g flights.

Some critics have said airlines should leave a few seats empty if they think they will be needed by crew members.

How United selects passengers for involuntar­y bumping In a report issued Thursday about the April 9 dragging incident involving a passenger on an overcrowde­d United Express plane, United Airlines spelled out the rules for how it selects passengers for involuntar­y bumping.

According to United, the process is automated — gate agents don’t decide who gets to stay and who is forced off.

First, anyone without a seat as- signment will be denied boarding the plane.

Passengers who paid the least for their ticket top the list for being bumped involuntar­ily.

Passengers who paid the same fare are sorted by when they checked in for the flight.

Customers with status in United’s MileagePlu­s frequent-flyer program won’t be bumped unless everyone on the plane has status, in which case the people with the lowest status get bumped first.

Unaccompan­ied minors and passengers with disabiliti­es won’t be bumped.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? United Airlines is vowing to reduce, but not eliminate, overbookin­g. It will now offer better payments for customers who are forced to give up their seat on a flight.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO United Airlines is vowing to reduce, but not eliminate, overbookin­g. It will now offer better payments for customers who are forced to give up their seat on a flight.

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