Includes Fee Refunds For Lost Baggage, Greater Protection From
Tarmac Delays
New consumer protections for airline passengers established by
the U.S. DOT went into effect Tuesday, which Secretary Ray LaHood
says will make flying more convenient and hassle-free for air
travelers nationwide. The new consumer protections, finalized
earlier this year, include requirements that airlines refund
baggage fees if bags are lost, increase compensation provided to
passengers bumped from oversold flights, and provide passengers
greater protections from lengthy tarmac delays.
“The Obama Administration believes consumers have the
right to be treated fairly when they fly,” said Secretary
LaHood (pictured). “The Department of Transportation's new
passenger protections will help ensure that air travelers receive
the respect they deserve before, during and after their
flight.”
Effective Tuesday, airlines will be required to refund any fee
for carrying a bag if the bag is lost. Airlines are already
required to compensate passengers for reasonable expenses for loss,
damage or delay in the carriage of passenger baggage. Under the new
rules, airlines must now prominently disclose all optional fees on
their websites, including but not limited to fees for baggage,
meals, canceling or changing reservations, or advanced or upgraded
seating.
The new rules also double the amount of money passengers are
eligible to be compensated for in the event they are involuntarily
bumped from an oversold flight. Previously, bumped passengers were
entitled to cash compensation equal to the one-way value of their
tickets, up to $400, if the airline was able to get them to their
destination within a short period of time (within 1 to 2 hours of
their originally scheduled arrival time for domestic flights and 1
to 4 hours for international flights). If they were delayed for a
lengthy period of time (more than two hours after their originally
scheduled arrival time for domestic flights and 4 hours for
international flights), they were entitled to double the one-way
price of their tickets, up to $800. Under the new rule, bumped
passengers subject to short delays will receive compensation equal
to double the one-way price of their tickets, up to $650, while
those subject to longer delays would receive payments of four times
the one-way value of their tickets, up to $1,300. Inflation
adjustments will be made to those compensation limits every two
years.
The Department of Transportation’s new rule also expands
the existing ban on lengthy tarmac delays to cover the
international flights of foreign airlines at U.S. airports, and
establishes a hard four-hour time limit on tarmac delays for all
international flights at U.S. airports. It also extends the
three-hour tarmac delay limit for domestic flights, currently in
place only at large-hub and medium-hub airports, to flights at
small-hub and non-hub airports as well. All carriers subject to the
tarmac rule will be required to report lengthy tarmac delays to
DOT. In all cases, exceptions to the time limits are allowed only
for safety, security or air traffic control-related reasons.
Carriers must also ensure that passengers stuck on the tarmac are
provided adequate food and water after two hours, as well as
working lavatories and any necessary medical treatment.
Additional measures under the new rule will take effect January
24, 2012, including:
- Requiring all taxes and fees to be included in advertised
fares.
- Banning post-purchase price increases.
- Allowing passengers to hold a reservation without payment, or
to cancel it without penalty, for 24 hours after the reservation is
made, if the reservation is made one week or more prior to a
flight’s departure date.
- Requiring disclosure of baggage fees when passengers book a
flight.
- Requiring that the same baggage allowances and fees apply
throughout a passenger’s journey.
- Requiring disclosure of baggage fee information on e-ticket
confirmations.
- Requiring prompt notification of delays of over 30 minutes, as
well as cancellations and diversions.
The final rule, proposed rule and comments are available on the
Internet at www.regulations.gov.