Government docs suggest months of inaction on ‘gap’ in passenger refund rules
OTTAWA — Internal documents suggest it took about half a year for the federal government to take action on air-passenger refunds after it first identified “gaps” in the rules.
Emails between Transport Canada and the Canadian Transportation Agency reveal that back in May 2020, officials highlighted regulatory blind spots around reimbursing passengers whose flights were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
One discussion document, recently released to the House of Commons transport committee, says the pandemic exposed holes in the regulatory framework and showed there are “no clear and consistent ground rules” for how passengers should be treated.
But the documents suggest the issue was barely raised internally until shortly before then-transport minister Marc Garneau directed the agency on Dec. 21 to strengthen the refund rules, which have not yet been put into place.