Friday, January 8, 2016

United Airlines fined $2.75M for disabilities complaints, and also for excessive tarmac delays

WASHINGTON – United Airlines was fined $2.75 million for violating rules governing the treatment of passengers with disabilities and for excessive tarmac delays, the Transportation Department announced Thursday.
article by Bart Jansen, USA TODAY | January 7, 2015

The $2 million disabilities fine stemmed from a rise in complaints in 2014 about the lack of airline assistance getting passengers onto and off of planes promptly at Houston International, Chicago O’Hare, Denver, Newark and Washington Dulles airports, the department said.

Airlines are supposed to stow wheelchairs and other mobility aids in a plane’s baggage compartment if there is no room in the cabin. But federal investigators found that United repeatedly failed to return wheelchairs and other mobility aids to passengers, or to provide assistance in a timely manner, according to the consent agreement with the airline.

“It is our duty to ensure that travelers with disabilities have access to the services they need, and that when significant tarmac delays happen, travelers are not left on the plane,” Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said. “We will make sure that airlines comply with our rules and treat their passengers fairly.”

United said that it receives 1 million requests for wheelchair assistance each year and strives to provide the service as seamlessly as possible. But the airline acknowledged that passengers have asked for better treatment.

"We want you to know that providing convenient, comfortable and flyer-friendly service to all of our customers is one of our top priorities, and we are committed to meeting all DOT rules," United said in a blog post Thursday on its website. "And while we’ve made significant efforts to improve, we remain focused on doing better."

The department required United to pay $700,000 of the fine within 30 days. United was also credited for $650,000 in compensation already given disabled passengers who filed complaints in 2014.

As another part of the fine, United agreed to spend $150,000 improving its audits to better check the assistance that wheelchair vendors provide and $500,000 on an experimental program to develop better technology to assist passengers through the airline’s mobile app. The steps must be completed by Sept. 1, 2017, under the agreement.

Even before the agreement, the spent $3.8 million on wheelchair lifts for airports in Newark, Houston, Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Orlando, according to the agreement. The airline said it will spend another $1.5 million on the facilities this year.

“We expect this to greatly improve our ability to have wheelchairs where they need to be, when they need to be there, so that our customers can get on their way home or to their next destination with ease,” said Jon Roitman, United's senior vice president of airport operations.

The airline was also fined $750,000 for five lengthy tarmac delays at O’Hare on Dec. 8, 2013, and one at Houston Hobby on May 20, 2015.

Airlines can be fined when domestic flights sit on the tarmac longer than three hours, or more than four hours for international flights, without any opportunity for passengers to get off.

The five O’Hare delays occurred during a severe winter storm that dropped an inch and hour of snow for two hours. But investigators found United mismanagement at airport gates kept passengers on planes up to four-and-a-half hours for flights to and from Tampa, Washington, Houston and Paris.

The lengthy delay at Houston airport involved a flight that diverted to Hobby rather than land at Bush international during a severe thunderstorm because the plane needed to refuel.

United said despite its lack of operations at Hobby, crews provided passengers with water, food and functioning lavatories. United said as weather permitted, the plane took off 14 minutes after the three-hour limit, according to the consent agreement.

United must pay $375,000 of the delay fine within 30 days. As part of the fine, United will spend $375,000 to buy and install an automated guidance system at 90% of its O’Hare gates that will allow aircraft to be parked in all weather conditions without needing people on the ground to direct them.

United said in a statement it was investing in cutting-edge technology at two of its largest hubs to reduce taxi times and safely guide aircraft to gates during storms.

“The safety of our customers and employees is always our first priority,” United said. “We are also focused on improving our reliability and operational performance, and in recent months have recorded some of our best flight completion, on-time arrival and on-time departure rates in the past five years.”
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/01/07/united-fined-275-million-disabilities-complaints-tarmac-delays/78433522/

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