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Airlines Must Let Paxs Off Stuck Planes

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CaptJax

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 3, 2006
Posts
310
Feds: Airlines Must Let Fliers Off Stuck Planes

WASHINGTON (Dec. 21) -The Transportation Department, responding to tarmac horror stories, orders airlines on Monday to let passengers stuck in stranded airplanes to deplane after three hours.

With its new regulations, the Obama administration is sending an unequivocal message to airlines that it won't tolerate the delays experienced by some passengers, such as an overnight ordeal in Rochester, Minn., last summer.

Under the new regulations, airlines operating domestic flights will be able only to keep passengers on board for three hours before they must be allowed to disembark a delayed flight. The regulation provides exceptions only for safety or security or if air traffic control advises the pilot in command that returning to the terminal would disrupt airport operations.

U.S. carriers operating international flights departing from or arriving in the United States must specify, in advance, their own time limits for deplaning passengers.

Airlines will be required to provide food and water for passengers within two hours of a plane being delayed on a tarmac, and to maintain operable lavatories. They must also provide passengers with medical attention when necessary.

From January to June this year, 613 planes were delayed on tarmacs for more than three hours, their passengers kept on board.

Airlines will also be prohibited from scheduling chronically delayed flights. Carriers who fail to comply could face government enforcement action for using unfair or deceptive trade practices.

The new regulations, which were published Monday in the Federal Register, go into effect in 120 days.

"Airline passengers have rights, and these new rules will require airlines to live up to their obligation to treat their customers fairly," Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in a statement.

Airlines have strongly opposed a hard time limit on tarmac strandings. They say forcing planes to return to gates so that passengers can get off could cause more problems than it cures. They predict more flights will be canceled, further delaying passengers from reaching their destinations.

Last month, the department fined Continental Airlines, ExpressJet Airlines and Mesaba Airlines $175,000 for their roles in a nearly six-hour tarmac delay in Rochester, Minn. On Aug. 8, Continental Express Flight 2816 en route to Minneapolis was diverted to Rochester due to thunderstorms. Forty-seven passengers were kept overnight in a cramped plane amid crying babies and a smelly toilet because Mesaba employees refused to open a gate so that they could enter the closed airport terminal.

The case marked the first time the department had fined an airline for actions involving a tarmac delay. Transportation officials made clear the case was a warning to the industry.

Consumer advocates have been pressing the department and Congress for at least a decade to do something extended tarmac delays. However, past efforts to address the problem have fizzled in the face of industry opposition and promises to reform.
 
Here we go again.
 
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I want off!!!!! Its been 3 hours and 1 minute, take me to the terminal a man yells. The person sitting next to him says no....my father is dying and I have to go......Captain says sorry your not going to make it, the Obama administration says that I am not being fair to this man next to you...I have delayed him too much. Back to the terminal we go, we are canceled and too bad for you.
 
Ladies and gentleman the Obama administration says after 3 hours on the Tarmac we need to go back. Once we get back to the terminal my F/O and I will pull ourselves from the flight due to duties hours’ limitation. So a new fresh crew will be coming from home, enjoy the next 3 hours of airport quality appreciation. Thank You :smash:
 
Agreed. Smart thing to do . You guys who are running up against your FAA duty limits are a hell of a lot scarier than this regulation.
 
Costs will go up because of this little gem. Question is: Who's gonna pay for it?
 
Looks like our government actually did something that makes sense.


J3

How the hell does it make sense to have a hard limit? If we sit in line at LGA for 3:55 and are number 3 for T.O., we now have to turn around!?!?

F-these morons in D.C.! Every time they do anything, they screw it all up worse!
 

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