Tuesday, March 26, 2013



FlyersRights.org
Your Rights 101
Knowledge is Power

Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Thanks to our passage of the Passenger Bill of Rights, you know DOT has gotten stricter about tarmac delays, ticket fee transparency and decreasing the number of bumped fliers, but what are your rights as an airline passenger in other situations? 

Here are the issues FlyersRights has championed, or is currently advocating for.   
They are also the topics we get asked about the most:

Disclosure of Taxes and Fees in Published Fares:
As of January 26, 2012, the DOT requires airlines to include all mandatory taxes and fees in published airfares, instead of simply putting asterisks with all the taxes and fees in tiny print. Airlines must also disclose baggage fees, though this can come in the form of a link to another Web page with the baggage fee information.

Need to Change or Cancel the Ticket:
If you realize within 24 hours of buying your ticket that you need to change or cancel it, you can do this without penalty (assuming you're booking at least 1 week before departure). You can also hold a reservation for 24 hours before paying for it.

Route Change:
DOT now requires airlines to give you prompt notification of delays, cancellations and route changes. 

Schedule Change:
Similar to the routing changes, if the airline changes your scheduled flight to a different time or day, you aren't legally entitled to any compensation, only a refund of the ticket price you paid. 


Bumping:
Domestic- If the flight is overbooked and you're bumped from a domestic flight and arrive one to two hours later than your scheduled arrival time, you're entitled to the one-way fare of your ticket up to $400. If you're delayed two to four hours from your original scheduled arrival time, you're entitled to 200% of the one-way fare, up to $650; if you arrive more than four hours later than your scheduled arrival time you're entitled to 400% of the one-way fare, up to $1300. 

You're entitled to payment in cash, so if the airline tries to give you a voucher, insist on cash, since vouchers usually come with restrictions and can sometimes only be redeemed at the airport itself. 

If you're bumped and the airline rebooks you on a flight that arrives less than one hour after your scheduled arrival time, you aren't legally entitled to any compensation, but it doesn't hurt to ask for a goodwill gesture, such as frequent flyer miles.

International flight departing from the U.S.:
You'll receive 200% of the one-way fare, up to $650 if you arrive one to four hours after your scheduled arrival time; if you arrive more than four hours later than your scheduled arrival time you're entitled to 400% of the one-way fare, up to $1300.  More on EU passenger rights here.

Seat Selection:
If you are forced out of your first class seat into a coach seat, you should be able to get the fare difference (or miles, if an award) refunded from the airline, given the different class of service.


If you pre-selected an aisle in the bulkhead are you owed compensation if the airline changes it to a middle seat in the back of the aircraft?  No. Seat assignments aren't part of the contract of carriage, so there's no remedy or compensation owed if the airline puts you in a different seat.  

Tarmac Delays:
DOT rules prohibit tarmac delays of more than three hours for domestic flights with the following exceptions: 1) If the pilot determines there is a safety or security-related reason why the aircraft cannot leave its position on the tarmac to deplane passengers; or 2) Air traffic control advises the pilot that returning to the gate or another point to deplane passengers would significantly disrupt airport operations.

Delayed Baggage:
What if you're flying to your destination wedding and your luggage, containing your wedding dress, is delayed? While our first recommendation would be to not pack anything valuable in your checked luggage, sometimes it can't be avoided.
  • Make sure to notify a baggage representative promptly, at the airport, within 4 hours of arriving at your destination
  • Check with the representative for the airline's reimbursement guidelines. Typically only basic toiletries and essential items will be covered
  • Keep all receipts for your purchases, so that you can submit them for reimbursement
Lost Luggage:
If the airline really did lose your checked bags entirely, and it was domestic travel, the airline is required to reimburse you for up to $3300. 
However, the airline may request receipts for the claimed item. It helps to have a list of everything you packed (if not receipts) for this purpose.
  
What more you can do if your rights are violated by an airline:
  • Write to the airline, cc to DOT and FlyersRights. Airline must acknowledge within 30 days and respond substantively within 60 days.
  • File a small claims court action (but airline has the right to remove to US District Court).
  • Airline can be investigated and fined by DOT but no compensation to passenger provided without airline consent or a court order. 
Your rights re. TSA or in-flight security: 
  • You have few rights other than to complain after the fact or decline to fly. Pat down searches with same-sex TSA agent in private area, instead of xrays are an option.  
  • Contraband items discovered can lead to reports and even arrests.  It's possible to be placed on the selectee list based a security incident, that may put you on the infamous No Fly list.  
  • Beware of complaining loudly on aircraft, as flight attendants can label you as a disruptive or a security threat, leading to arrest, questioning by police or ejection from flight.  Recording an incident may be allowed on some airlines but others ban use of video recording, as does TSA.  
In sum, passenger rights concerning security are weak and unsettled as there is often a conflict between security and civil rights laws.  

Airline and TSA employees have sometimes been known to file charges against passengers as a defense against complaints likely to be filed against them.  

TSA issues are a main focus for FlyersRights.

Trustee Objects to Horton's Severance Package 
AA Seeks Court Extension for Filing Reorganization Plan
American Airlines CEO Tom Horton, left, and US Airways CEO Doug Parker appear with an airplane model bearing the new American Airlines logo after announcing the two airlines' merger at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. (Tom Fox, Dallas Morning News / McClatchy-Tribune)

American Airlines is asking a US bankruptcy court to extend to May 29 the deadline to file a reorganization plan that would allow it to emerge from Chapter 11 protection.

The U.S. trustee overseeing American Airlines' bankruptcy has asked the carrier to justify its offer of $19.9 million in severance pay to Chief Executive Tom Horton, part of compensation linked to its merger with US Airways.

According to the filing, made Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, the company has stated that it doesn't have to address the payment because the newly reorganized company will make the payment, not the current AMR. 

But Trustee Tracy Hope Davis said it's not who makes the payment that is the important factor, but whether the payment conforms to restrictions placed on compensation arrangements by the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. In the filing, Davis said "a severance payment of close to $20 million defeats Congress' intent" when it put restrictions on such compensation. 

Frontier Airlines Has Nation's Highest Complaint Rate in January; 
Southwest the Lowest 

Last week, DOT reported Frontier Airlines had by far the highest rate of consumer complaints of 16 major U.S. airlines in January.

Most of Frontier's complaints stemmed from a one-time transfer of frequent-flier miles involving the airline's Wisconsin customers.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel announced that hundreds of Frontier customers in Wisconsin have filed complaints with state officials over failure by the airline to transfer their frequent-flier miles to Delta as promised.

Frontier's rate of 7.58 complaints per 100,000 passenger enplanements was nearly three times the 2.63-per-100,000 rate of United Airlines, which had the second-highest rate in January.

Frontier also posted the worst on-time arrival rate of 16 major airlines in January: 71.3 percent. 

Meanwhile, Southwest Airlines, had the nation's lowest complaint rate in January: 0.32 per 100,000, according to DOT's monthly Air Travel Consumer Report.


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