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More Passenger Strandings

Lots of airplanes sat idled with stranded passengers on lots of aprons for two or three hours this weekend, with airlines blaming weather.

At least two — both Minneapolis-bound, what luck Twin Cities! — sat for longer on Friday — for 5 1/2 and 4 hours respectively. These were Sun Country Flight 242 and Delta Flight 1140.

In both cases, runway work at the Minneapolis airport and bad weather were cited.

If it’s not one thing, it’s another.

On Aug. 8, in the most infamous recent case, a packed ExpressJet plane sat stranded all night at the airport in Rochester, Minnesota, where it had been diverted from Minneapolis by bad weather. In a blistering preliminary report, the Transportation Department blamed dispatchers from a rival carrier, Mesaba (flying for Delta Connection on behalf of Delta, on a flight coded as Northwest) for inaccurately telling the captain of the Expressjet flight (flying for Continental Connection on behalf of Continental) that the plane couldn’t come to a gate to let suffering passengers off because the airport was closed for the night. It isn’t clear yet what authority Mesaba had to speak for the airport itself. A full report is pending from the DOT.

Again, the Business Travel Coalition, a trade group representing corporate travel buyers, denounced the nearly three-year pattern of “nightmarish” conditions imposed on stranded passengers, some of whom have sat on idled planes for more than 12 hours.

The trade group quoted a former airline board member, “Beyond three hours, the airlines need to fix the problem, and if they are forced to do so, they will.”

They are about to be forced to do so by the Transportation Department and by congressional legislation on passengers rights. It’s going to be very interesting.

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One Response

  1. John Says:

    Yeah, I won’t be flying unless it is absolutely necessary. I’ll drive my car, take a bus or train first before booking an airline ticket. First of all, everyone is treated like a criminal. I don’t need that, because in the country that I live in, one is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Secondly, I won’t sit on an aircraft from more that 30 minutes awaiting takeoff. I’ll go to jail first before sitting on a plane for 6-12 hours on the tarmac. It’s a bunch of bullsh!t. It’s called LAZY folks. Does anyone know what that word even means anymore. Lazy in the standard these days. It certainly needs to change.

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