[release][B]STORY HIGHLIGHTS[/B]
[LIST]
[*]The Transportation Department issues a second set of pro-consumer rules
[*]Among changes: Airlines must disclose all fees and taxes on their websites
[*]Compensation for bumped passengers is increased, tarmac delays are limited
[*]A passenger rights advocate hails the changes: "This is really ground-breaking"
[/LIST]
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[release][IMG]http://imgkk.com/i/ifng.jpg[/IMG]
[B]Washington (CNN)[/B] -- Call it the Airline Passenger Bill of Rights, Version 2.0.
The Department of Transportation issued a second set of rules Wednesday to address a litany of passenger gripes, including the bane of modern air travelers' existence: hidden fees for bags, meals, pillows and reservation changes.
The new rules, which will take effect in 120 days, require airlines to prominently disclose all fees and taxes on their websites. It also increases compensation for passengers who are involuntary bumped, limits "tarmac delays" for international flights to four hours and makes other pro-consumer changes.
"We're trying to look out after passengers who, in some instances, have been treated pretty shabbily," Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said.
Passenger rights advocates, who lauded the proposed rule, are likely to be happy with the final rule.
"We are ecstatic about the job that the Department of Transportation is doing," said Kate Hanni of [URL="http://www.flyersrights.org/"]FlyersRights.org[/URL]. "They have taken on airline passenger rights in a way that no other administration has. And this is really ground-breaking for airline passengers. The fact that they're passing meaningful regulations... is just a miracle."
Hanni said the changes exceed those made in the 2009 airline passenger rights rule, which was prompted by a flurry of lengthy tarmac delays that put a national spotlight on passenger discontent.
In a nutshell, the new rules:
-- Require full disclosure of additional fees. Airlines must prominently disclose all potential fees on their websites, including fees for baggage, meals, canceling or changing reservations, or advanced or upgraded seating. Airlines and ticket agents must refer passengers to baggage-fee information, and must include all government taxes and fees in every advertised price. Previously, taxes and fees were not required in the up-front fare quotes.
"We recognized that passengers are sick and tired of paying for fees that they didn't know they were going to be paying," Secretary LaHood said. "Now all fees will be disclosed on the airline websites. So if you have to pay for a bag, it will be disclosed. If you need a pillow, it will be disclosed if you have to pay for it, (same with) a blanket, food. All of these things and the taxes will all be disclosed," he said.
And soon to come: the DOT says it will propose that all fees be displayed at ticket counters and other points of sale.
-- Limit tarmac delays. Foreign airlines at U.S. airports, or U.S. airlines on international flights, must limit tarmac delays to four hours. The rule makes exceptions for safety, security or air traffic control-related reasons. But carriers must ensure that stuck passengers are provided adequate food and water after two hours, as well as working lavatories and any necessary medical treatment. An existing rule limits tarmac delays for domestic flights to three hours.
-- Require compensation for bag fees. Airlines must refund baggage fees if the bag is lost. Airlines already must compensate passengers for lost, damaged or delayed bags. But the new rule requires them to refund the bag fees, typically $25 a bag, if the bag is lost. Airlines will also must apply the same baggage allowances and fees for all segments of a trip.
"So if you check a bag, they charge you $25, they lose your bag, you get reimbursed," LaHood said.
Some 2 million bags were lost, damaged or delayed in 2010, a rate of 3.57 per 1,000 passengers, the Department of Transportation said.
-- Increase compensation for bumping. The rule doubles the possible compensation for passengers involuntarily bumped from an oversold flight. Currently, bumped passengers are entitled to compensation equal to the value of their tickets, up to $400, if the airline is able to get them to their destination within a short period of time, or up to $800 for lengthier delays.
Under the new rule, bumped passengers subject to short delays will receive up to $650, while those
subject to longer delays would receive payments up to $1,300. Inflation adjustments will be every two years.
Some 65,000 passengers were involuntarily bumped in 2010, a rate of 1.09 per 10,000 passengers, the Department of Transportation said.
The final rule announced Wednesday is available at the [URL="http://www.regulations.gov/#%21home"]regulations.gov website[/URL], docket DOT-OST-2010-0140.
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[url=http://www.cnn.com/2011/TRAVEL/04/20/passenger.rights/index.html?hpt=T2]CNN[/url]
Now we need the EPA and every other govt organization to follow this example, and stuff will get done finally. Especially the FAA on plane insurance.
Nice try.
Axe the TSA and then I might fly again.
[QUOTE=GunFox;29318716]Nice try.
Axe the TSA and then I might fly again.[/QUOTE]
And replace it with corporations right?
[QUOTE=VengfulSoldier;29318775]And replace it with corporations right?[/QUOTE]
Replace it with nothing.
Axe the TSA.
TSA
"Thousands Standing Around" is what they call them at my dads work
If this ever gets adopted in Europe, Ryanair will not be amused.
Disclosure of all fees is good, but the new regulations don't seem to actually [i]do[/i] anything about said fees.
Still, it's a good step in the right direction, and preferable to past attitudes of "Fuck it, let the corporations do whatever they want, good for business good for America etc."
[quote]"The fact that they're passing meaningful regulations... is just a miracle."[/quote]
The fact that disclosing all fees and taxes is a miracle is kind of sad.
Does every flight still come with a complimentary fondling?
[QUOTE=Caesar;29319802]If this ever gets adopted in Europe, Ryanair will not be amused.[/QUOTE]
Similar laws already exist within the EU. For example, airlines must include "fuel duty" within the price, and must tell buyers if the flight includes a meal. All of the bullshit things like check-in charges have been pretty much abolished as well.
God damn capitolism. Communism (executed well that is) ftw.
[QUOTE=AaRoNg11;29320597]Similar laws already exist within the EU. For example, airlines must include "fuel duty" within the price, and must tell buyers if the flight includes a meal. All of the bullshit things like check-in charges have been pretty much abolished as well.[/QUOTE]
There are still loads of hidden charges. For example, Ryanair charges you an extra amount if you do not order using a Visa Electron, and you are charged a fiver for checking in online.
[editline]20th April 2011[/editline]
But yes, I believe that some similar laws are in place in the EU.
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