Cape Breton Post

Untapped potential

Apps and websites help air passengers get compensati­on for flight problems

- MONEY MONITOR BY ROSS MAROWITS

Airline passengers who use social media to vent their rage at being stuck on a tarmac for hours or waiting days for their luggage to arrive may get some apologetic words from the company, but are unlikely to recoup any money for their efforts.

That’s because the percentage of Canadians who actually apply to airlines for compensati­on is in the single digits, something that Jacob Charbonnea­u hopes to change.

The former airline employee is co-founder and CEO of Flight Claim, a Quebec-based company that has helped passengers reclaim $1.5 million in compensati­on for flight delays, cancellati­on, lost baggage and overbookin­g since starting less than two years ago.

Charbonnea­u saw the service’s potential after helping a colleague fight an airline over a $900 claim.

“I didn’t find that it was fair that people weren’t able to get the compensati­on only because they’re not aware of their rights or they’re not aware of how to get that compensati­on,” he said in an interview.

There is plenty of untapped potential because less than five per cent of Canadian passengers bother to file claims for compensati­on, Charbonnea­u said.

With Flight Claim, passengers complete an online form and leave the company to handle the rest.

There’s no fee, but the company gets paid 25 per cent of the award if it is successful.

A similar business model is used by a myriad of competitor­s that operate abroad under names such as Weclaim, Green Claim, Refund.me, EUclaim and Flightrigh­t.

While airlines are getting better at managing their fleet, a five per cent annual growth of passengers is straining airports, airlines and air traffic controller­s, resulting in more delays, cancellati­ons, and the odds of getting bumped, according to Henrik Zillmer, founder of AirHelp, which offers a service similar to Flight Claim. It also takes a 25 per cent commission.

Only 15 per cent of global passengers obtain compensati­on, leaving 85 per cent high and dry, he said.

“It’s very much a secret that the airlines have kept from you that we are now trying to tell all air passengers,” he said from New York City.

The company says it has helped more than 20,000 Canadians who stumbled upon the service even though it only formally launched in Canada last month.

Customers can allow AirHelp to link with their email to automatica­lly monitor if they are entitled to any compensati­on on flights they have taken.

AirHelp sometimes steps in to sue airlines that reject refund applicatio­ns knowing most passengers will give up and not attempt to force the situation by filing suit within the three-year expiry period, Zillmer said.

Gabor Lukacs, founder of advocacy group Air Passenger Rights Canada, says he supports efforts to help passengers get the compensati­on they deserve, but he’s not confident that for-profit companies will bear the expense of helping the more challengin­g cases that would require litigation.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Jacob Charbonnea­u of Flight Claim is seen in his office, recently in Brossard, Que.
CP PHOTO Jacob Charbonnea­u of Flight Claim is seen in his office, recently in Brossard, Que.

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