Business World

United will not face fines after passenger dragging incident

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WASHINGTON — The US government told United Continenta­l Holdings, Inc. it would not face fines after a 69-year-old man was dragged from a flight in April, a US official said on Wednesday, a decision that was criticized by a passenger rights groups.

The Transporta­tion Department notified United of its decision in a May 12 letter made public on Wednesday by passenger advocacy group Flyers Rights. A government official confirmed the authentici­ty of the letter, which said United did not comply with all aspects of the government’s rules on oversellin­g seats.

In April, video went viral on social media of David Dao being dragged from a United aircraft at Chicago’s O‘Hare Internatio­nal Airport after he refused to give up his seat to make room for a crew member.

United said in a statement on Wednesday “this incident should never have happened and we are implementi­ng all of the improvemen­ts we announced in April, which put the customer at the center of everything we do.”

The incident drew attention to the practice of “bumping” whereby airlines deny passengers access to flights after deliberate­ly over-booking them to ensure all seats are filled.

United said it had an almost 90% reduction of so-called involuntar­y denied boardings year over year since May 1.

Paul Hudson, president of Flyers Rights, said for “the Department of Transporta­tion to conclude that United Airlines’ conduct did not warrant an enforcemen­t action is a derelictio­n of duty.” He said the Transporta­tion Department should have held a public hearing after finding United violated government rules.

The Transporta­tion Department for months repeatedly refused to disclose the status of its investigat­ion into Mr. Dao’s dragging.

“No passenger should be treated like that,” Transporta­tion’s Elaine Chao told a Senate panel in July.

The department did not immediatel­y comment on Wednesday.

The government letter said United provided correct compensati­on for four out of five passengers on the Chicago flight but did not provide required, written oversales notices to Dao or his wife.

United Chief Executive Oscar Muñoz apologized at a congressio­nal hearing in May for the removal of Mr. Dao, with whom the airline reached a settlement for an undisclose­d sum.

Airlines have said they routinely overbook flights because a small percentage of passengers do not show up. — Reuters

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