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Will This Be the Year for Passenger Rights?

Some lawmakers want to require airlines and travel agents to disclose the full price of an advertised ticket, including taxes and fees. But it remains to be seen whether any of the proposed amendments will ever fly.

The travel industry doesn't exactly have a sterling reputation for keeping its promises.

That's true not just of the lofty low-price guarantees that some hotels offer but hedge with lawyerly fine print. It also applies to something as seemingly straightforward as an airline sticking to its published schedule. (Check the contract; it isn't required to.)

So travelers might be forgiven for having been a little skeptical last year when they were promised help in the form of long-overdue government regulation and laws that would compel airlines to treat them better and tell the truth about their fares.



Maybe it's a statement about the process, but the most commented-upon proposed rule had practically nothing to do with enhancing consumer protections. It was a new regulation to limit the consumption of peanuts on a plane.

"It was really amazing," said Cynthia Farina, a professor of law at Cornell University, which helped create the site Regulationroom.org (www.regulationroom.org) to collect consumer comments. "We had more comments on that than on all the rest -- combined."

Fitting, too. Today, with a president who seems to have taken a step back on regulation -- signing an executive order last month that initiates a government-wide review of the proposed rules already on the books -- and a Congress that has shifted rightward, many are wondering if the hopeful passenger rights rhetoric of 2010 is about to give way to a harsher reality.


I asked the Transportation Department whether the regulations were on track, and a representative said that a final rule should be issued in April, as scheduled. The agency isn't talking much beyond that, but it's likely that behind the scenes, comments are being collected, evaluated and weighed, and that there are ongoing conversations between the administration and the agency, says Cary Coglianese, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in the study of regulation and regulatory processes.

"The political climate has changed," he said. "And that could affect the final rule."

What Passenger Rights are on the Line

The government wants to require airlines to include all required fees in the advertised price of its tickets, instead of breaking out each surcharge and creating the illusion of a cheaper fare. It would like more airlines to adopt contingency plans for lengthy tarmac delays, to report more data on delays and to notify customers promptly of delays.

The Transportation Department also wants carriers to set minimum customer service standards, increase compensation for passengers denied boarding and stop airlines from raising the fare after a ticket has been bought. Plus, it wants to make customer service plans part of the contract of carriage -- the legal agreement between airlines and customers -- so that passengers can sue for breach of service.


As you can probably imagine, airlines are unhappy with the proposed rules. In comments filed with the department, several referred to a number of the new regulations as unwanted government interference, "harming rather than advancing the interests of both consumers and competition." Coming from an important but fragile business like the airlines, those words are likely to have some effect on the final rule, say observers.

There's also some momentum on the legislative side to give passengers more rights. The most prominent example is the Clear Airfare Amendment to the FAA Reauthorization Bill, proposed by Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), which would compel airlines and travel agents to disclose the full price of a ticket, including taxes and fees. The amendment would also force earlier disclosure in the buying process of any fees for checked baggage, seating assignments, optional in-flight goods and services and other fees that may be charged after the ticket is purchased.


How much earlier is a matter of some debate. The latest version of the amendment reflects airline industry pressure on lawmakers to mandate disclosure only at the time of booking, which would basically codify the airlines' deception about the total cost of a ticket. And everything hinges on the passage of the ambitious reauthorization bill, now in its 17th incarnation.

"Consumers have a right to know what they're paying for," Menendez said to me last week. "Travelers already pay enough without being hit with hidden fees."


But the House leadership is sending mixed signals about passenger protections. Although Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman John Mica (R-Fla.) said that the FAA bill is a "top priority," he has also called for leaner, more streamlined legislation that "does more with less" -- which suggests that some unnecessary amendments may be dropped before the bill is passed. Those may -- or may not -- include important airfare transparency provisions.

Seems to me that some difficult decisions lie ahead. Should the government, which promised to protect airline passengers last year, do the expedient thing -- or the right thing?


A Southwest Airlines pilot faced a similar choice earlier this year, when he learned that a passenger on his flight from Los Angeles to Denver was running late.

Mark Dickinson of Sierra Vista, Ariz., was flying to Colorado to say goodbye to his 2-year-old grandson. Southwest (www.southwest.com), as it happens, has one of the worst on-time records in the industry; in November, the Transportation Department considered only 79 percent of its flights on time. So the pressure for a punctual departure must have been enormous.


But Dickinson's circumstances were extraordinary and tragic: His grandson was on life support after having suffered a head injury when his mother's boyfriend allegedly threw him across the room. This was Dickinson's last chance to see the child before life support was removed.

It would have been easy for Southwest to fly without Dickinson. But the pilot held the plane for 12 long minutes. "They can't go anywhere without me, and I wasn't going anywhere without you," he told Dickinson.

That wasn't the expedient thing to do, but it was the right thing to do.


Will the government and our elected officials have the courage to do the right thing, too?

Christopher Elliott is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine and the co-founder of the Consumer Travel Alliance, a nonprofit organization that advocates for travelers. You can read more travel tips on his blog, elliott.org. E-mail him at celliott@ngs.org.

(c) 2010 Christopher Elliott. Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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