The Borneo Post

United settles with dragged passenger

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CHICAGO: United Airlines set out to repair its image, reaching an undisclose­d settlement with the dragged passenger at the center of a worldwide uproar and promising to refocus on customer service.

David Dao, the passenger left bloodied by the April 9 incident captured on video and widely shared on social media, reached an ‘ amicable settlement’ with United, his lawyers announced.

Under the terms of the deal, the amount of the settlement are to remain confidenti­al.

Dao was pulled from his seat and dragged off the full plane by airport security in Chicago to make room for airline crew. The 69-year- old doctor suffered a concussion, and a broken nose and teeth, according to his lawyers.

After initial missteps in which the company appeared to at least partially blame Dao, the carrier and CEO Munoz apologized repeatedly and launched the internal review to find out what went wrong.

United’s chief executive Oscar Munoz promised to refocus on customers, as the company revealed a number of operationa­l changes. “We breached public trust, and it’s a serious breach,” Munoz told NBC News.

The airline will now offer passengers up to US$ 10,000 in compensati­on to be bumped off overbooked flights, and promised to reduce overbookin­g in the first place. Those and other changes, which the airline called “substantia­l,” are the result of a two-week internal probe of the April 9 incident, video of which went viral.

In an interview with NBC News, Munoz said the airline will refocus its business by ‘ putting the customer at the center’ and avoiding issues in which employees, passengers and law enforcemen­t are placed in ‘ impossible situations.’ The carrier’s report highlighte­d 10 changes, including the increased financial enticement, which goes into effect Friday to get customers to voluntaril­y give up their seats on overbooked flights.

The crew on Flight 3411 had only offered US$ 1,000, the report said.

United also has pledged to reduce overbookin­g – the practice of selling more tickets than seats on a plane to account for noshows – on certain flights “that historical­ly have experience­d lower volunteer rates,” United spokeswoma­n Maggie Schmerin told AFP.

Such flights include those that are the last of the day and on smaller planes, both of which were factors on Flight 3411. Without enough volunteers to take later flights, airlines are forced to involuntar­ily ‘bump’ passengers off overbooked planes.

“It is our goal to reduce involuntar­ily denied boarding to as close to zero as possible,” Schmerin said.

Seth Kaplan, managing partner of the trade publicatio­n Airline Weekly, told AFP that the changes announced Thursday will help improve United’s image, but he characteri­zed many of them as modest.

“Some of this is catching up with competitor­s,” Kaplan said. “I don’t think in the aggregate they’re going to reduce overbookin­g dramatical­ly.”

Dao attorney Thomas Demetrio applauded United’s move, calling the changes ‘passenger friendly.’ He also praised the airline for settling with his client.

“Mr Munoz said he was going to do the right thing, and he has,” Demetrio said.

“United has taken full responsibi­lity for what happened,” he said, ‘ without attempting to blame others.’ United was not the only airline to modify its practices, as the dragging incident and its aftermath reverberat­ed throughout the industry. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A combinatio­n of video screengrab­s shows passenger Dao being dragged off a United Airlines flight at Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport in this video filmed by @JayseDavid April 9.
— Reuters photo A combinatio­n of video screengrab­s shows passenger Dao being dragged off a United Airlines flight at Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport in this video filmed by @JayseDavid April 9.

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