A Draft
Airline Passenger Bill of Rights
A simple creation of fairness
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The United States has
been founded on certain assumptions of inalienable rights
and the concept of fairness.
We need to rediscover our roots, and bring back the
concept of fairness and rights to air travel and how we as
passengers are treated by the airlines.
Part 2 of a 2 part series -
part 1
explains why we need a Passenger Bill of Rights. |
Air travel is potentially full
of annoyances both small and large, ranging from the overhead
light that doesn't work, killing your ability to read a book on
the long overnight flight, to arriving at the airport and
discovering your flight was cancelled and having the airline
representative say 'we tried to contact you' even though your
cell phone has always been on, in coverage, and with no call
from the airline.
What makes these aggravations
worse is that, at present, we're often completely uncompensated
for them.
We can't stop the airlines from
being airlines, but we can financially punish them for their bad
behavior and hopefully thereby motivate them to adopt a better
standard of service.
The Airline Passenger Bill of
Rights will do exactly that.
What the Passenger Bill of
Rights covers
The Passenger Bill of Rights
does two things - it removes existing airline exemptions from
the usual standards of commercial contracts and fairness, and it
gives passengers compensation when things go wrong.
The Passenger Bill of Rights
applies to all passengers on all airlines, both scheduled and
charter, and applies to all flights, no matter what size the
aircraft, for the sectors of their itinerary where either the
departure or the arrival is with a US airport.
These rights are not
exclusionary and don't prevent passengers from seeking other
recourse that might also be open to them.
Lastly, recognizing that
even with the full force of a Bill of Rights enacted into law,
there may still be times when airlines choose to ignore their
obligations, it makes it simple and easy for passengers to sue
to claim their entitled compensation, and penalizes airlines
that neglect their obligations.
The Passenger Bill of Rights
See also the section on
definitions, below, for definitions of key words and phrases,
and the section on compensation, also below, for the
entitlements you'll earn if your rights are violated.
The following are the
provisions we're proposing be incorporated in an airline
passenger bill of rights. You might have others you'd like
included, or comments about the current inclusions.
Please pass any comments you have back to us so we can adapt
and improve on the present draft.
A right to compensation if
your flight is delayed
If a flight is more than one
hour and less than two hours late arriving at its destination
(see definition of 'late arrival') each passenger will qualify
for Level One compensation (see section on compensation below).
If a flight is more than two
hours late arriving at its destination, each passenger will
qualify for Level Two compensation.
In addition, if a flight is
more than three hours late departing, each passenger will be
offered a Three Hour Delay compensation for each full three
hours of delay.
In addition, if a flight
becomes or is expected to become more than four hours late
departing, the airline will offer to make arrangements to
transport passengers on any other scheduled carrier that can
accommodate them to their destination, and at no additional cost
to the passengers, regardless of what the extra cost may be to
the airline.
In addition, if a flight
becomes or is expected to become more than six hours late, with
at least four of those hours falling between the hours of 11pm
and 6am, each passenger will be offered an Overnight Delay
compensation.
If a flight is considered to
be 'chronically delayed' such that, for more than one in every
three flights during the last 28 days, this same flight has been
delayed by more than one hour arriving at its destination,
passengers will be entitled to double the Level One or Level Two
compensation they would otherwise receive.
A right to compensation if
your flight is cancelled
If, at any time subsequent
to a passenger paying in full for their airline ticket, any one
of the flights on their itinerary is cancelled, the airline that
issued (plated) the ticket on which the cancelled flight is part
of must provide timely notification of the cancellation and
offer (at the passenger's choice) either alternate flights on
the same airline(s) as before or on any other airlines that
operate flights closer to the time of the cancelled flights than
the flights offered by the ticketing airline.
As an alternative, the
passenger may ask for a refund, either of their complete ticket
if they have not yet commenced their travels, or of those
affected parts of their ticket if their journey has commenced.
For the purpose of calculating refunds, an unused half of a
roundtrip fare will be valued at half the price of the roundtrip
fare.
In addition to arranging
alternate flights or refunding affected parts of an itinerary,
the airline will also pay Level One compensation to each
passenger.
If the airline did not
provide timely notification, it will also be liable for
compensation as if the flight were delayed, based on the
difference in departure and arrival time of the replacement
flight(s) and the original cancelled flight(s).
If a flight is considered to
be 'chronically cancelled' such that, for more than one in every
seven flights during the last 28 days, this same flight has been
cancelled, passengers will be entitled to double the Level One
compensation they would otherwise receive.
In the case of a
cancellation directly related to a declared state or national
disaster or emergency in either the region in which the flight
is scheduled to take off or land, then - if the airline makes a
timely notification to passengers, it will suffer no further
cancellation penalties, but will still remain obliged to rebook
passengers on any available flight or to refund tickets, and to
provide delay compensation in the form of meals and - if
overnight - accommodation as per the provisions of the delay
right.
A right to compensation if you
are denied boarding
Airlines must re-accommodate
passengers holding a confirmed reservation and who have checked
in on time for their flight, who are denied boarding, onto the
first available alternate flight to the passenger's ultimate
destination on that affected part of their itinerary, no matter
which airline this may be with or what the cost to the airline
shall be, and in the same or superior class of service.
In addition, passengers
shall be entitled to compensation based on the delays involved
in completing their travels as per the provisions of the right
to compensation if the flight is delayed, except that, no matter
how short or long the delay, the passenger will be entitled to
at least Level One compensation if a coach class passenger, and
an unrestricted free ticket for the same itinerary in the same
class if a premium cabin passenger.
A right to compensation if
your luggage is delayed
Any passenger with delayed
luggage shall be entitled to a $100 compensation payment.
If their luggage remains
delayed after 24 hours, they shall be entitled to an extra $50
for each 24 hours or part thereof until such time as their
luggage is returned to them or deemed to be lost.
The airline is responsible
for conveying the delayed luggage to wherever the passenger
currently is once the luggage has been found. If the
passenger is on a cruise ship, the airline shall convey the
luggage to the next port of call where the passenger can then
collect it.
If the passenger lost their
luggage on their final flight back home, their entitlement for
delayed luggage compensation shall be limited to $100.
The airline responsible for
delayed, lost and damaged luggage shall be the airline that
transported the passenger to the place where the passenger
expected to receive their luggage.
A right to compensation if
your luggage is lost
If a passenger's luggage is
lost, they shall be entitled to reimbursement of the fair
replacement value of the piece of luggage and its contents, up
to a maximum of $2800 per person.
The passenger will be
required to make an affidavit subject to penalties of perjury,
listing the contents of their suitcase, item by item, and
showing the fair market replacement value of each item in
sufficient detail as to allow the airline to confirm the
valuation.
No items that were lawfully
packed into the checked item shall be excluded from entitlement
to reimbursement, up to the maximum of $2500.
Reimbursement already paid
to the passenger while the luggage was deemed delayed rather
than lost shall be in addition to the reimbursement now made for
the loss of the luggage.
The airline responsible for
delayed, lost and damaged luggage shall be the airline that
transported the passenger to the place where the passenger
expected to receive their luggage.
A right to compensation if
your luggage was damaged
If a passenger suffers
damage to items that were in their checked luggage, then the
airline shall reimburse them for the cost of repair to a
standard of appearance and/or functionality as if it had not
been damaged at all, or the fair market replacement value of
such items, up to a maximum of $2800 per person for all items
claimed as a result of one leg on an itinerary.
If the item was not
adequately packed and protected for the usual foreseeable
somewhat rough handling that luggage receives, the airline will
be exempted from liability. Adequate packaging shall
deemed to be that standard of packaging required variously by
the air courier companies and USPS.
If the suitcase itself was
damaged, the airline shall either repair it or compensate for
the fair market replacement cost of the suitcase, less a
straightline ten year depreciation allowance. The cost of
replacing the suitcase shall comprise part of the maximum $2000
per itinerary leg liability.
If the airline opts to
repair the suitcase, it will be responsible for arranging the
suitcase to be transported to and back from a repair facility.
If the suitcase was damaged other than on the final leg of an
itinerary, the airline must either repair the suitcase prior to
the passenger needing it for their next itinerary leg or agree
to pay for its depreciated replacement value.
The airline responsible for
delayed, lost and damaged luggage shall be the airline that
transported the passenger to the place where the passenger
expected to receive their luggage.
A right to not be trapped on a
plane
If more than seventy five
minutes elapse between when the last passenger boards a plane
and when either the plane takes off or it aborts, returns to the
gate, and commences deplaning passengers, and/or if more than
sixty minutes elapse between when the plane touches down and
when the first passenger steps off the plane, all passengers
will be entitled to a Trapped On Board compensation and for an
additional Trapped On Board compensation for each whole thirty
minutes of extra time that this situation continues.
A right to assign a ticket to
someone else
All tickets can be assigned
to anyone else, except that tickets with special discounts
relating to the type of passenger traveling (eg senior,
military, child, government) can only be assigned to other
people meeting the same qualifications.
If a passenger chooses to
assign their ticket to someone else, they will advise the
airline of this any time prior to checking in, and provide such
normal details as the airline may require about the person
replacing them.
The airline may choose to
charge a transfer fee, with such fee not to exceed the greater
of 10% of the published fare (excluding taxes and surcharges) or
$25.
A right to fly or not fly
Passengers may travel on
any, all, some, or none of the legs of a ticket's itinerary,
including choosing to cancel any sectors of their journey, at
any time, without incurring any penalty or extra cost.
A right to clearly understand
flight details
So as to eliminate confusion
about whether or not a journey involves changes of planes and/or
stops en route, airlines must assign a unique flight number to
every flight comprising a single take off and a single landing.
A right to clearly understand
on-board comfort details
Airlines shall publish on
their websites details about the seats in their different cabin
configurations on their different planes, including such
information as effective seat width (from the inside of the left
arm rest to the inside of the right arm rest), degrees of seat
back recline, pitch as measured from one point on one seat to
the same point on the seat in front, effective net pitch, being
the distance from the front of the seat back half way up one
seat to the back of the seat back, halfway up the seat back
immediately in front, and face space, being the distance from
the top of the back of the seat in front, when fully reclined,
extended horizontally to where it meets the front of the seat
back behind.
A right to clearly understand
the cost of a ticket
The most prominently
displayed prices shown in any promotion or fare description must
be the total price, inclusive of all taxes and other surcharges,
so that a passenger can pay exactly this sum and no more to get
the travel as described (subject to availability), booking
through the method implied in the information provided, and
paying by a Visa, Mastercard, American Express or other credit
card accepted by the airline or other advertiser/fare promoter.
Any fares shown as one way
will be available for purchase as one way without the need to
purchase any additional flights, and can not be described as
'one way based on roundtrip purchase'.
A right to receive included
products and services
If an airline customarily
provides food or drinks or in-flight entertainment or lounge
access or any other product or service as part of a flight,
including also such things as a properly functioning seat and
overhead light, and allocated seats (in terms of aisle or window
categories) then passengers have a right to receive such things.
If any such item is not
provided as normally, the passenger has a right to compensation.
Any such compensation will be not less than 10% of the ticket
value, or not less than $25, and may be such larger amount as
may be fair and appropriate. In determining what is fair
and appropriate, it is acceptable to include a penalty factor as
well as a compensating factor, but in no case will the airline's
liability exceed that of the fare paid by the passenger for that
sector.
A right to travel in the class
of service booked
Airlines may offer upgrades
to passengers without needing to pay compensation.
But if an airline is forced
to downgrade a passenger from the premium cabin they were booked
and confirmed in, they shall refund the passenger in full and
carry the passenger for free on the affected flight.
A right to speedy compensation
Every airline shall operate
a toll free customer service line.
It will publicize the toll
free number in type size the larger of either not less than 7pt
or not less than 4pt smaller than the size of any other phone
numbers and website addresses shown in all promotional
materials.
It will provide sufficient
incoming lines so that 99% of callers never receive a busy
signal.
It will staff this service
at a suitable level so that callers wait no longer, on average,
to speak to a customer service representative than they would
wait to speak to a regular reservationist if calling the regular
toll free number to make a new booking, and in no event may hold
times exceed five minutes.
Airline staff who take these
calls will have sufficient authority to immediately resolve
claims involving sums of less than $1000 per passenger without
the need to seek supervisory approval.
Claims in excess of this
amount must be resolved and the resolution communicated to the
passenger claimant within 48 hours of being received.
If the airline needs extra
information prior to ruling on a claim, it must communicate this
need either at the time of the phone call for amounts less than
$1000 per passenger, or within 48 hours for larger sums, and
must respond with a resolution within 48 hours of receiving the
requested information.
Ticket refunds, both for
partially used and entirely unused tickets, and also for lost
tickets, must be made and funds returned back to the passenger
within fourteen days of the refund request being lodged. A
passenger does not need to submit any paperwork in support of a
passenger refund receipt.
Payments, travel vouchers,
and/or any other form of compensation must be received by the
customer within fourteen days of the airline and passenger
agreeing on the compensation.
If an airline does not meet
these service guidelines, it will pay an extra $100 in
compensation to the passenger for each 24 hours or part thereof
of delay in resolving a dispute, and an extra $100 for each 24
hours or part thereof of delay in the passenger receiving the
compensation agreed to.
A right to have disputes heard
in a local jurisdiction
In the event a passenger
chooses to bring legal action against an airline, the passenger
may choose to bring the action in any competent local, city,
county or district court, including, if the sum is within
limits, a small claims court, that is located within the general
metroplex area of either the airport from which the flight the
complaint relates to departed from or landed at, or, if the
airline offers service to/from the passenger's home city, within
the general metroplex area of that city, irrespective of where
the flight problem occurred.
In any such action, the
burden of proof shall be on the airline to show that it has
conformed to the requirements of this Bill of Rights.
If the court finds for the
passenger, it will be asked to consider whether the airline
acted in bad faith in denying the passenger's claim. If
the court feels the airline did not apply a fair, large, and
liberal interpretation to this Bill of Rights, it will increase
the compensation awarded to the passenger by an amount of not
less than $250 and not more than twice the amount originally
claimed.
Automatic inflation adjustment
The monetary levels of
compensation will increase every twelve months by the amount of
the CPI increase during the past twelve months.
Definitions
Affected Flights on an
Itinerary : A delay or cancellation in a single flight
can conceivably cause a chain of problems throughout the
itinerary. In such a case, an airline is responsible not
only for the single flight with problems but of other affected
flights too.
A flight is deemed to be
affected if either :
-
It can no longer be taken as
originally ticketed due to the incoming/connecting flight no
longer arriving in time
-
Changes/delays to the
incoming flight into a stopover on an itinerary reduce the
passenger's time at the stopover by more than 25%
An airline is only
responsible for other affected flights if the flights are also
on itself (or on a codeshare showing the airline's designator),
or if they were ticketed (plated) by itself.
Cost of parts of an
itinerary : If a passenger becomes entitled to a
refund for one part of an itinerary, and if this one part does
not clearly have a value shown for it on the total ticket cost
calculation, then the cost of this segment shall be deemed to be
an equal pro rata part of the larger part of the ticket that
does show a value and which this segment comprises, based on
what proportion of the total miles it comprises.
Delayed Luggage :
Any piece of checked luggage that does not arrive on the same
flight as the passenger, other than luggage which arrived on an
earlier flight and is available for collection by the passenger
upon their arrival, as if it were arriving on the same flight,
is deemed to be delayed.
The period of delay shall
run from that time commencing one hour subsequent to the time
the plane arrived at the gate and the first passenger deplaned
until such time as the luggage is returned to the passenger's
current address.
Flight Cancellation :
A flight is deemed to be cancelled when any of the following
occurs :
-
A flight is rescheduled, more
than two days prior to day of departure, so that the
passenger's itinerary for that portion of their travel ends
up with more than a two hour change in either departure or
arrival time for itineraries of less than 1000 miles, or
three hours for itineraries of less than 1500 miles, or four
hours for all other itineraries, except that any change in
itinerary for which the passenger does not receive timely
notification will be deemed to be a cancellation
-
A flight is cancelled and no
longer operates with that same flight number and is not
replaced by another flight at the same times but with a
different flight number
Late Arrival :
The lateness of an arrival will be measured as between the
normal scheduled time published by the airline for this flight
and the actual time the first passenger steps out of the
airplane.
Late Departure :
The lateness of a departure will be measured as between the
normal scheduled departure time published by the airline for
this flight and the actual time the plane pushes back from its
gate.
Lost Luggage :
Any piece of checked luggage that is delayed for more than seven
days may be deemed lost.
If the airline has
positively identified the delayed item and is merely having
problems returning it to the passenger, it shall remain as
delayed.
The airline and passenger
may mutually agree to change the designation of a piece of
delayed luggage to 'lost' at any time, either before or after
the notional seven day point.
Timely Notification :
Timely notification is notification given within one hour of the
event occurring which requires notification, if the event
relates to a flight scheduled to occur within the next 24 hours,
two hours if the flight is scheduled to occur within the next 48
hours, and three hours in all other situations.
If an airline has multiple
phone numbers in its passenger record, it shall attempt to reach
the passenger directly, using all phone numbers, and leaving
messages at each phone number, if possible, if the passenger is
not able to take the call. If an airline also has an email
or pager or other means of contact, and if it can not make
direct immediate voice contact, it shall also send emails and
leave messages using these additional methods.
Compensation
The following are minimum
levels of compensation. Airlines and passengers may
mutually agree on alternate compensation, including non-cash
compensation in the form of travel vouchers or free tickets.
Non-cash compensation
If the passenger and airline
agree on a level of non-cash compensation in lieu of cash
compensation as specified below, the airline shall clearly
disclose what restrictions may apply to the non-cash
compensation, including such details as :
-
If a travel voucher for a
stated dollar value to be applied to any future travel
purchases, when is the first date this can be redeemed and
when is the last date it can be redeemed, and whether it can
be redeemed for travel only in the name of the compensated
passenger, or if it can be redeemed by other people instead,
and if the value of compensation needs to be redeemed in a
single transaction or in multiple transactions
-
If compensation is in the
form of a free ticket or tickets, what restrictions apply to
these tickets in terms of when is the first date they can be
redeemed and when is the last date they can be redeemed, and
whether they can be redeemed for travel only in the name of
the compensated passenger, or if it can be redeemed by other
people instead, and what restrictions apply on advance
booking, changes, and inventory classes allocated. In
all cases with free tickets, they shall not have rules and
restrictions placed on them that are more restrictive than
those which apply to regular three week advance purchase
fares (or, if the airline does not have three week advance
purchase fares, such lesser advance purchase fare as is
closest to three weeks)
Level One Compensation
$50 for flights of less than
750 miles, $100 for flights of between 751 and 1500 miles, and
$150 for flights longer than 1501 miles.
Level Two Compensation
$75 for flights of less than
750 miles, $150 for flights of between 751 and 1500 miles, and
$225 for flights longer than 1501 miles.
Three Hour Delay Compensation
A meal voucher and a prepaid
phone card good for at least five minutes calling anywhere in
the US
Overnight Delay Compensation
Coach class passengers
traveling alone will be given a single room with private
facilities at a nearby hotel of at least 'superior tourist
class' standard, or, at their request, they may share a twin or
double room with any other traveling companion.
Coach class family members
traveling together will be given a twin or double room per two
passengers at a nearby hotel of at least 'superior tourist
class'.
Business or first class
passengers traveling alone will be given a single room with
private facilities at a nearby hotel of at least 'first class'
standard, or, at their request, they may share a twin or double
room with any other traveling companion.
Business or first class
family members traveling together will be given a twin or double
room per two passengers at a nearby hotel of at least 'first
class'.
All passengers will also be
given roundtrip transfers between the airport and the hotel.
Passengers living in the
nearby region may, upon mutual agreement between them and the
airline, accept cash compensation in lieu of the hotel
accommodation and transfers.
Trapped On Board Compensation
$50 per passenger
Enforcement of the Passenger
Bill of Rights
Most enforcement can be done
by passengers filing small claims against the airlines for
violations of their rights.
In addition, the FAA should
make compliance with the Bill of Rights part of the
certification process for all airlines licensed to operate in
the US, just the same as they require maintenance and other
aspects of the airline's operation to meet specified standards.
Read more in Part 1
In
Part 1 we blah
blah blah
explain the airlines' liability for lost
luggage, and the various catches and exceptions where they might
end up not paying you, at all, for the most valuable things in
your luggage.
We also warn you how to
avoid paying 100 times the fair cost of extra luggage insurance,
and give suggestions for how to minimize the chances of having
your luggage go missing in the first place.
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Originally published
25 Feb 2005, last update
28 May 2011
You may freely reproduce or distribute this article for noncommercial purposes as long as you give credit to me as original writer.
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