Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Still waiting on refund for pandemic-canceled flight

- By Christophe­r Elliott King Features Syndicate Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Contact him at elliott.org/help or chris@ elliott.org.

Q: I’ve been trying for months to get a refund from Expedia for flights canceled during the pandemic. Although Expedia has politely replied to all my refund requests, I still don’t have my money.

I used Expedia to book roundtrip tickets from Boston to Paris on Air France last March. Just before the departure date, I received a text message from Air France. It said it canceled my flight from Boston to Paris because of the virus and rebooked me on a Delta flight instead. Air France transferre­d my flight without my knowledge or consent. Of course, Delta canceled its flight as well.

Since that time, I have made multiple requests for a refund of $568. Every time, Expedia has politely replied that the request is on the way, but there are delays because Air France is “overwhelme­d” with the cancellati­on requests. An Expedia representa­tive said it could take up to 12 weeks, but it’s been much longer. Can you help me get a refund for the canceled Air France flight?

— Liga Aldins, Westwood, Massachuse­tts

A: Air France owes you a prompt refund. If an airline cancels your flight, you’re entitled to an immediate refund. If you accept a reschedule­d flight, then the same cancellati­on terms apply as before. Which is to say, if the airline cancels, you can get a full refund; if you cancel, you get a ticket credit. But you never accepted the new flight.

I see the back and forth between you and Expedia in the paper trail you provided. You were correct to lean on your online travel agent for a refund, but it looks as if the site was powerless to move your refund forward. It wasn’t even clear who had your money. Was it Air France, Delta or Expedia?

(Answer: It was Air France.)

I understand that refunds are slower during the pandemic, but this is ridiculous. Working with Expedia should make the process move faster, since technicall­y an online travel agent is your advocate.

You could have reached out to an executive at Expedia. I publish the names, numbers and email addresses of Expedia’s managers on my consumer advocacy site at www.elliott.org/company-contacts/expedia-customer-service-contacts/. If that didn’t work, you could have also reached out to Air France (www. elliott.org/company-contacts/air-france/) or Delta (www.elliott.org/ company-contacts/deltaair-lines-customer-service-contacts/).

I contacted Expedia on your behalf. It offered a $100 voucher to make up for the sluggish refund and promised a refund from the airlines. But Expedia warned that it would take

another 10 to 12 weeks. “Unfortunat­ely, we have no way to expedite this since the refund is coming from the airline rather

than Expedia,” the representa­tive told me.

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