The Asian Age

US airline to offer $10,000 for giving up seat

Compensati­on aims to encourage passengers to surrender seats on overbooked flights

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New York, April 27: The US-based United Airlines said on Thursday that it would offer passengers who volunteer to forfeit their seats on overbooked flights up to $10,000 as part of the carrier’s efforts to repair the damage from the rough removal of a passenger. The offer came after rival Delta outlined plans to offer up to $9,950 in such cases.

United also said it would take actions to reduce overbookin­g flights and improve customer satisfacti­on. “Our goal is to reduce incidents of involuntar­y denial of boarding to as close to zero as possible and become a more customer-focused airline,” the carrier said in the statement.

United had spent the last two weeks embroiled in controvers­y after videos recorded by fellow passengers, which went viral, showed David Dao, 69, yanked from his seat aboard a Louisville, Kentucky-bound United flight before takeoff from Chicago’s O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport to make room for crew members.

Mr Dao lost two front teeth in the scuffle, incurred a concussion and broke his nose, according to his lawyer, and will likely sue the airline.

United typically oversells flights by less than zero to three per cent of the plane’s seat capacity to account for no-shows.

United said it would no longer call law enforcemen­t to deny passengers boarding, nor would passengers who are already seated be required to give up their seats on overbooked flights.

United will adopt a “no questions asked” policy on permanentl­y lost baggage, paying customers $1,500 for the value of the bag and its contents, beginning in June. “This is a turning point for all of us at United,” CEO Oscar Munoz said in a statement.

Munoz, who took the helm at United in 2015 as part of an effort to improve customer relations, has faced calls to step down after referring to Dao as “disruptive and belligeren­t” in a statement following the incident. It sparked a national conversati­on on US carriers’ treatment of customers in an industry comprising just a handful of competitor­s following years of mergers and consolidat­ions.

United announced last week that Munoz, in a move he himself initiated, would not become company chairman in 2018 as stated in his employment agreement.

UNITED typically oversells flights by less than zero to three per cent of the plane’s seat capacity to account for no-shows.

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