Says Legislation Is Badly Needed Due To Poor Customer Service,
On-Time Records
The concept of a "Passengers' Bill
Of Rights" for commercial airline travelers has been bandied about
for years, with little success. The idea has caught fire again,
however, after a particularly egregious incident last month in
Austin, TX.
A group of passengers who were stranded onboard an American
Airlines flight at Austin-Bergstrom International for over eight
hours -- with no food or access to bathroom facilities -- called on
Members of the Senate Commerce Committee and the House
Transportation & Infrastructure Committee Monday to hold
hearings on a comprehensive Passengers Bill of Rights.
"We feel that enough is enough. This is not the first time, nor
is it likely to be the last, that this kind of degrading treatment
is visited on passengers," said Kate Hanni, one of the passengers
stranded onboard American Airlines flight 1348. "Thousands of
legitimate complaints by travelers mistreated by the airlines are
regularly dismissed or inadequately addressed by the industry."
The group says a Passenger Bill of Rights would modernize and
improve airline industry standards for customer service. They note
poor customer service by the big airlines has dramatically worsened
over the years, with a recent government report stating the airline
industry reported a six-year low in on-time statistics in November
2006.
As Aero-News reported,
American Airlines flight #1348 from San Francisco to Dallas was
diverted to Austin, TX on December 29, due to heavy storms in
Dallas. In Austin, the passengers were forced to wait in the cabin
for almost nine hours with no running water, and no working
bathroom facilities.
Passengers stuck onboard the MD-83 say there was virtually no
food, and the stale air quickly became polluted because of a
sanitary system that met its capacity. Passengers claim they have
yet to receive any explanation -- or apology -- from the
company.
The group is also calling upon House and Senate members to urge
the Department of Transportation and Department of Justice to
condition the merger of US Airways and Delta Airlines on the
adoption of such a Bill of Rights -- noting similar measures have
been enacted in other mergers, including the recent
AT&T/BellSouth telecommunications deal.

"As Congress considers airline mergers, it is the perfect time
to finally give consumers and taxpayers what we deserve: a
comprehensive, enforceable Passenger Bill of Rights," Hanni
said.
Proposed tenets of such a bill include the following:
-
Establish procedures to
respond to all passenger complaints within 24 hours and with
appropriate resolution within 2 weeks.
- Notify passengers within ten minutes of a delay of known
diversions, delays and cancellations via airport overhead
announcement, on aircraft announcement, and posting on airport
television monitors.
- Establish procedures for returning passengers to terminal gate
when delays occur so that no plane sits on the tarmac for longer
than three hours without connecting to a gate.
- Publish and update monthly on the company's public web site a
list of chronically delayed flights, meaning those flight delayed
30 minutes or more, at least 40 percent of the time, during a
single month.
- Compensate "bumped" passengers or passengers delayed due to
flight cancellations or postponements of over 12 hours by refund of
150% of ticket price.
- Ensure that baggage is handled without delay or injury; if
baggage is lost or misplaced, the airline shall notify customer of
baggage status within 12 hours and provide compensation equal to
current market value of baggage and its contents.
In 1999, a similar piece of legislation (brought about by a
similar incident as the one in Austin, this time affecting several
flights in Detroit) was successfully fought and killed by the
airlines... but with the incident in Austin still fresh in the
minds of lawmakers and travelers alike, the group says now is the
time for change.
"In light of this horrific experience, and most importantly, the
dismissive attitude of the airlines in not seeking to remedy it in
any way, we are forming a coalition of travelers whose focus it is
to develop an air travelers' bill of rights," the group wrote in a
letter to Senator Daniel Inouye (above), and CC'd to several other
lawmakers.
"Enough is enough. This is not the first nor will it be the last
time that this degrading and humiliating treatment occurs. Without
some corrective action, air travelers are sure to continue to
experience being treated as cattle in an increasingly uncompetitive
airline industry."