Liberals table legislation to overhaul passenger rights charter
OTTAWA — The Liberals have put forward legislation that aims to make good on their pledge to tighten passenger rights rules after a year marked by travel chaos and a ballooning complaints backlog.
Tabled in the House of Commons as part of a broader budget bill Thursday, the new provisions ratchet up penalties on airlines, shore up the complaint process and target luggage and flight disruption loopholes that allow airlines to steer clear of customer compensation.
Sylvie De Bellefeuille, a lawyer with the advocacy group Option consommateurs, says the tenfold increase to a $250,000 maximum fine for airline violations encourages compliance, as does an amendment placing the regulatory cost of complaints on carriers’ shoulders.
She also says complaint resolution will be faster with the establishment of dedicated officers, and applauds the closure of a loophole that has allowed airlines to avoid compensation for delayed baggage.