The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Will American Airlines bar customers from changing a ticket?

- By David Koenig

FORT WORTH, TEXAS » American Airlines is threatenin­g to prohibit customers from making changes to nonrefunda­ble tickets if Congress makes good on a proposal to crack down on unreasonab­le airline fees.

American CEO Doug Parker says his airline would be acting just like many other businesses when customers want to swap their ticket for a different flight or for another day.

“We — like the baseball team, like the opera — would say, ‘We’re sorry, it was nonrefunda­ble,’” Parker said this week.

Parker made the comments as the airline industry’s main trade group mobilizes to defeat a proposal in Congress to limit airline fees.

Changing a domestic ticket on the largest airlines typically costs $200. Last year, U.S. carriers collected nearly $2.9 billion in change fees. American led the pack with $878 million — a big chunk of its $1.9 billion 2017 profit.

The Senate has voted to tell the Transporta­tion Department to make sure that various fees — including ticket-change and baggage charges — reflect the airline’s actual cost for providing the extra service. The House has not yet gone along, and the fate of the Senate provision, contained in a bill governing the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, is unclear, especially with Congress rushing toward adjournmen­t before the November mid-term elections.

The Trump administra­tion opposes the fees provision. In May, the Transporta­tion Department said it would be a step back toward re-regulating airline pricing, which largely ended in 1978.

Parker said that if the provision becomes law, American would almost certainly eliminate the option for customers to change their ticket if they bought a nonrefunda­ble fare — the most affordable types of tickets.

He concedes that it doesn’t cost American $200 to change a customer’s ticket. That’s not the point, he says.

“We knew that seat was going to be filled. It allowed us to do other things as we sold the rest of the airplane,” he says. “If you want to change that, we have a new product but it’s going to cost you something because it cost us something.”

Or as Sharon Pinkerton, lobbyist for the trade group Airlines for America, puts

it: “I don’t think my venti Starbucks costs $5.63 either to produce, but the market works and there is demand for that.”

Pinkerton said limiting airlines’ ability to set fees is “dangerous,” and defeating it is important to the industry.

It would be a tricky business decision for American, Delta or United to bar customers from changing nonrefunda­ble tickets. For one thing, a large competitor, Southwest Airlines, does not charge fees for changing or canceling a ticket.

Eliminatin­g the option to alter a reservatio­n also would run counter to the current trend of airlines offering many options to passengers in order to get the most possible revenue from everyone from the penny-pinching vacationer to the expense-account business flyer.

Critics such as Consumers Union accuse airlines of nickel-and-diming customers with a bevy of fees, and many support legislatio­n to limit the extra charges. Just this week, Delta Air Lines joined United Airlines and JetBlue Airways in raising checkedbag­gage fees within the U.S. to $30 for the first bag and $70 for two bags — each way — up from $25 for one bag and $60 for two.

But airline pricing is notoriousl­y complex, and pulling at one string could loosen another.

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