Times Colonist

Government, consumer advocate in court over air passenger refunds

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

The federal government and a consumer rights advocate squared off in court Wednesday over whether regulators misled passengers by encouragin­g travel credit rather than refunds at the onset of the pandemic.

In the early months of COVID-19’s spread, airlines cancelled hundreds of thousands of flights and offered company vouchers to customers instead of refunds.

The Canadian Transporta­tion Agency issued a statement on vouchers in March 2020 that said flight credit constitute­d a “reasonable approach” to passengers left out of pocket by the cancelled trips.

The post suggested a refund was mandatory only if the contract between the customer and airline provided for it.

The Air Passenger Rights advocacy group argues that the regulator showed potential bias by misinformi­ng travellers about their legal right to a refund for services not rendered.

“By giving the public a false sense of legitimacy to the airlines’ unlawful actions, the CTA’s statement on vouchers defeated existing federal laws for refunds and unlawfully interfered with passengers’ credit card chargeback­s and travel insurance claims,” the group stated in court filings.

The government argued the case should be dismissed, saying the CTA’s statement simply reiterated that vouchers were one means of compensati­on. It said the advocacy group incorrectl­y framed the guidance as tainted.

“The CTA, faced with an unpreceden­ted worldwide situation, issued the statement as non-binding guidance. The statement does not represent any decision by the CTA” — and thus never breached consumers’ rights — the attorney general wrote in court filings.

Air Passenger Rights lawyer Simon Lin argued the CTA’s statement about vouchers was prompted by a request from Air Transat to the Transport Department.

The group asked the Federal Court of Appeal to order a retraction of the voucher statement, along with a correction.

It also asked the judicial panel to prevent the agency’s tribunal members from handling refund cases relating to the pandemic.

In court on Wednesday, the judges seemed to cast doubt on parts of Air Passenger Rights’ argument, asking repeatedly for examples of agency decisions that denied refunds to passengers on the basis of the CTA’s voucher statement. They also questioned whether the regulator’s statement came at the behest of airlines.

“Even if we accept your premise, you still have to show that it affects legal rights,” said Chief Justice Yves de Montigny.

The relationsh­ip between Canada’s airline watchdog and the travel industry came under renewed scrutiny in 2021 after emails from the early days of the pandemic were released. In those emails, airline industry executives pressed civil servants to back their position against issuing passenger refunds, days before the regulator did just that.

Three days after a letter from Transat’s chief executive at the time asking for confirmati­on that “no refunds to passengers are required,” the CTA posted its statement, saying that airlines could generally issue flight credits or vouchers to customers whose flights had been cancelled because of the pandemic, rather than refunding them.

The Associatio­n of Canadian Travel Agencies also wrote to the regulator asking it to help them with “prevention of credit card chargeback­s.”

The CTA’s statement on March 25, 2020, sparked public backlash and thousands of complaints to the transporta­tion agency.

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