SFGate: Govt.: Air Passengers Have No Recourse

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Thursday, February 15, 2007 (AP)
Govt.: Air Passengers Have No Recourse
By LESLIE MILLER, Associated Press Writer


   (02-15) 21:43 PST WASHINGTON, (AP) --

   After being stuck for 11 hours on a parked airplane during a snow and ice
storm, JetBlue passengers found out there's nothing they can do about it.
There are no government regulations limiting the time an airline can keep
passengers on grounded aircraft.

   The airlines' voluntary code of conduct simply says that during such
extraordinary delays, they will make "reasonable efforts" to meet
passenger needs for food, water, restroom facilities and medical
assistance.

   Airlines have blocked attempts to set minimum legal standards for custom=
er
service by agreeing to a voluntary code of conduct that they have not
always followed.

   On Wednesday, hundreds of JetBlue passengers were stuck for as long as 11
hours in parked jets at John F. Kennedy International Airport during the
winter storm.

   Sean Corrinet of Salem, Mass., spent almost nine hours aboard a JetBlue
flight for Cancun, Mexico, that never got off the ground.

   "It was like — what's the name of that prison in Vietnam where they
held McCain? The Hanoi Hilton," Corrinet said, referring to Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz.

   He said the crew passed out bags of chips — the only food available
— and periodically cracked the hatch to let in fresh, cool air.

   The airline acknowledged that it hesitated nearly five hours before
calling for a fleet of buses to unload at least seven jets that spent the
day sitting on runways because of the weather and congestion at the gates.

   A similar incident happened on Dec. 30, when American Airlines and
American Eagle diverted 121 flights found for Dallas to other cities
because of thunderstorms. About 5,000 passengers were left sitting on
parked aircraft, some for eight hours.

   The Dec. 30 incidents prompted American to say it would put a four-hour
limit on how long passengers would be kept on grounded planes.

   In the late 1990s, the nation's 14 largest airlines joined forces to blo=
ck
a drive by Congress to enact legal protections for passengers, changes
that were sought after a series of flight cancellations and delays.

   Instead, the airlines agreed to an Airline Customer Service Commitment a=
nd
incorporated it in their customer agreements, called "conditions of
carriage," which are legally enforceable by the customer against the
airline.

   The airlines said they would notify customers of delays and diversions,
try to deliver baggage on time, refund tickets promptly and meet
customers' essential needs when they were stuck on parked airplanes.

   The airlines, though, didn't agree to limit the amount of time they could
keep people inside airplanes that aren't going anywhere.

   By February 2001, the airlines were improving their customer service,
according to a review by the Transportation Department's inspector
general.

   A short time later, the airline industry lost record amounts of money.
Some sought bankruptcy protection following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks, the severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, epidemic, the war
in Iraq and rising fuel prices.

   By November 2006, customer service had slipped at many airlines, accordi=
ng
to Transportation Department Inspector General Calvin Scovell. Many
airlines dropped their programs to control quality and measure
performance, Scovell reported.

   Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., chairman of the House Transportation
Committee, blamed the Transportation Department for failing to enforce the
customer service standards agreed to in 1999.

   In the case of JetBlue, Oberstar said the airline didn't have a plan to
manage an extreme circumstance.

   "The airline can't say, 'We didn't know, we didn't anticipate, this didn=
't
happen before,'" Oberstar said.

   Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said Thursday she will introduce a bill to
give passengers the right to get off the airplane if it's been on the
ground for more than three hours past its scheduled departure time.

   ___

   Associated Press writer David Caruso contributed from New York.

   ___

   On the Net:

   To link to American Airlines' conditions of carriage:

   (search site for 'conditions of carriage')

   Passenger Bill of Rights Advocates:

   www.aa.com

   www.strandedpassengers.blogspot.com ------------------------------------=
----------------------------------
Copyright 2007 AP

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