Better rights for passengers

passengers flyingThe European Parliament has voted today on proposals from the European Commission to strengthen passenger rights including: measures to ensure that air passengers have new and better rights to information, care and re-routing when they are stranded at the airport. At the same time there will be better complaint procedures and enforcement measures so passengers can actually obtain the rights to which they are entitled.

Commission Vice-President Siim Kallas, responsible for transport, said: “I hate being stranded at an airport. And I am sure most other people hate it too. It is bad enough if you are travelling on business, but if it’s the holiday time and you have a young family with you it quickly turns into a nightmare. That’s why it’s so important that passenger rights do not just exist on paper. We all need to be able to rely on them when it matters most – when things go wrong. We know that the real priority for stranded passengers is just to get home. So our focus is on information, care and effective re-routing. The aim is to get passengers where they want to be as quickly as possible while giving the airlines the time they need to sort problems out.”

The Commission’s air passenger rights proposal (presented March 13 2013) clarifies legal grey areas and introduces new rights where necessary.

The Parliament gave strong backing to key Commission proposals to strengthen air passenger rights, including:

  1. Enforcement: Parliament supports the Commission’s proposal to strengthen oversight of air carriers by national and European authorities (with tougher requirements on national authorities to monitor closely the performance of airlines and new possibilities for joint investigations between authorities facing the same problems), as well as more effective sanctions.
  2. Right to care. Parliament supports the Commission’s proposal to introduce a right to care for passengers after a delay of 2 hours, for all flights irrespective of distance. Until now, the time varied depending on the flight distance.
  3. Complaint handling. Parliament backs the Commission’s proposal to ensure that the passenger has a right to a response to their complaint within 2 months and an acknowledgement of a complaint within a week (there is currently no time limit). The Parliament proposes in addition that the Commission define a common complaint form.
  4. Right to information: Parliament backs the Commission’s proposal to ensure passengers have a right to information about their situation, 30 minutes after a scheduled departure. Currently there is no time limit. In addition, the Parliament proposes to have contact points in the airports to inform passengers on the circumstances of their travel disruption and on what are the rights they are entitled to.
  5. Re-routing: Parliament backs the Commission’s proposal to improve the rights of consumers by ensuring that passengers have a right to be re-routed by another air carrier or transport mode in case of cancellation when the carrier cannot re-route on its own services. The Commission proposes that this right applies after 12 hours, the Parliament suggests a much lower limit of 8 hours.
  6. Misspelling: Parliament backs the Commission’s proposals to provide a right for a passenger to correct a spelling mistake in a name “free of charge.”
  7. Connecting flights: Parliament backs the Commission’s proposal to clarify that rights to assistance and compensation apply if you miss your connecting flight because the previous flight was late – however, the Parliament specifies that the compensation applies only where there is a delay of at least 90 minutes for the first flight.
  8. Luggage: Parliament backs Commission’s proposal to give national authorities enforcement powers over lost luggage rules (set out in the Montreal Convention). Claims provisions are also improved – the form you fill out at airports must be accepted by airlines when you make a claim…..

Read the whole press release fro European Commission here:

http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-14-119_en.htm

This entry was posted in EU . Bookmark the permalink.