Attempting to sleep on a long-haul flight in economy is one of the most uncomfortable tasks in travel, right up there with handling seasickness on a cruise or managing a third-degree sunburn at the beach.
24.05.2024 - 19:05 / afar.com / William Macgee
Airport delays. Air ticket refunds. The size of your airline seat, and those annoying fees for being able to select a specific seat. These and other perennial hot-button items for fliers were among a slew of issues that were addressed in Congress recently, as lawmakers debated provisions in a massive piece of legislation reauthorizing the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for the next five years.
The measure’s passage, which had been delayed for almost a year by partisan wrangling, was hailed as a win for consumers by its supporters. In a statement, Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-Illinois) described it as “the most significant effort by Congress in over a decade to make flying safer, easier and more accessible for passengers with disabilities.”
Now that the bill has been signed into law by President Biden, more details of the 1,000-page doorstopper have emerged. And while on balance there was good news for fliers, not everything that consumer groups sought ended up in the final version.
“Consumers did not get everything we wanted but on balance we’ve seen some things we’ve never seen before [enacted into law],” said William McGee, senior fellow for aviation and travel at the American Economic Liberties Project. As one example, he cited a provision in the law that would require the U.S. Government Accountability Office to conduct a study of how consolidation has affected competition in the airlines. “Some of us been fighting for these kinds of things for 20 years.“
Here are some of the main highlights of the legislation, the initiatives that could affect air travelers the most.
The bill codifies a recent U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) rule requiring airlines to automatically issue refunds to passengers whose flights are canceled or significantly delayed, which it defines as three hours for a domestic flight and six hours for an international trip. This would remove the need for consumers to request a refund, which can take time, but it wouldn’t apply in cases where fliers are offered and accept alternative transportation or travel credits. The requirement would also apply to tickets bought from a third-party seller such as an online travel agency (like Expedia or Booking.com) or travel advisor; the American Society of Travel Agents has asked for the DOT to clarify how this would work, arguing that it could pose a burden to smaller agencies that would have to claw back their payment to the airline.
Consumer groups have been fighting for a federal mandate setting minimum standards for airline seats and legroom,arguing that tight seating and crowded flights could impede an evacuation in the case of an emergency. Instead, the bill orders the DOT to revisit seating and evacuation standards and also
Attempting to sleep on a long-haul flight in economy is one of the most uncomfortable tasks in travel, right up there with handling seasickness on a cruise or managing a third-degree sunburn at the beach.
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