The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Frontier Airlines fined for long delays in Denver snowstorm

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The U.S. Department of Transporta­tion said Friday it fined Frontier Airlines $1.5 million for keeping passengers stuck on a dozen aircraft on the Denver airport tarmac for more than three hours amid a snowstorm last December.

But the department said it will forgive $900,000 of that because of compensati­on the airline paid to the passengers.

The delays came after a storm dropped 8 inches of snow at Denver Internatio­nal Airport on Dec. 16-17.

Passengers were held aboard 12 planes sitting on the tarmac for more than the three-hour limit set by law, the Transporta­tion Department said.

The department said Frontier did not have enough staff and did not delay or divert enough flights to alleviate congestion at airport gates.

On one occasion, the airline used an open gate to load passengers on a departing flight instead of unloading a waiting plane that had already arrived, the department said.

Frontier spokesman Richard Oliver said the airline revised its winter weather procedures and worked with the Denver airport on a system to get passengers off planes more quickly.

“During last December’s crippling storm, our operation in Denver was faced with a myriad of operationa­l challenges,” he said in a written statement.

The airline told the Transporta­tion Department that the snowstorm was worse than predicted and that it had taken steps to relieve the delays. The airline said it was fully staffed and called in extra workers from its Denver headquarte­rs to help at the airport.

Frontier told the department it spent nearly $1.2 million on compensati­on and flight vouchers to passengers.

The Transporta­tion Department said the $1.5 million fine was the secondhigh­est amount imposed on an airline for tarmac delays.

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