Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Revised airline compensation rules will do little to change status quo: experts

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TORONTO — Proposed changes to Canada’s passenger rights charter will perpetuate loopholes that allow airlines to forego compensating travellers whose flights are disrupted, say airline experts.

Ottawa has proposed an update to rules surrounding airlines’ obligations when a flight is delayed or cancelled by designating certain factors outside a carrier’s control, such as weather that could affect flight safety, as “exceptional circumstances.”

Under the amended rules, airlines are still generally not required to provide compensation for inconveniences to passengers in situations involving such factors, though there are some exceptions.

But Air Passenger Rights advocacy group president Gabor Lukacs called the weekend announcement of the proposal “deceptive” and said that Transport Canada is actually “preserving the status quo.”

He said that under the newly outlined rules, which are now open to a 75-day feedback period, around half of flight delays and more than two-thirds of cancellations would still not qualify for compensation.

Previously, Canada’s passenger rights charter — which took effect in 2019 — divided flight disruptions into three categories: those caused by factors within the carrier’s control, disruptions within the carrier’s control but required for safety purposes, and those outside the airline’s control.

Passengers had only been entitled to compensation in the first of those categories.

Lukacs said the government’s amended rules merely give a new title to the latter two categories. He called it “semantics.”

“They are just renaming the two categories when no compensation is owed as ‘exceptional circumstances,'” he said.

The changes seem to do little to firm up when airlines will have to pay, said John Gradek, who teaches aviation management at McGill University.

“Now they call it exceptional circumstances, and now we’re going to have a debate as to how do you define exceptional circumstances. So they jump from one murky issue to another murky issue,” said Gradek.

“That doesn’t solve the problem.”

He said he would have preferred to see regulators shift to the model used in the EU that puts a higher onus on the airlines and makes exemptions in the most unusual cases.

The Canadian Transportation Agency has been working to amend regulations associated with the Canada Transportation Act since the Liberal government passed legislation last year aiming to tighten rules for passenger rights.

The changes appeared to scrap a loophole through which airlines have denied customers compensation for flight delays or cancellations when they were required for safety purposes.

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