Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
India

Air India May Have To Pay US$ 8.8 Million To Passengers For Flight Delay

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 May, 2018 01:16 PM
    State-run carrier Air India may have to pay a penalty of US$ 8.8 million to 323 passengers of its May 9 Delhi-Chicago flight, which was delayed as a fallout of withdrawal of relaxations given on flight duty time limitation (FDTL) of the crew.
     
     
    This incident has brought into focus in a plea by Air India and the Federation of Indian Airlines (FIA) which represents private carriers Jet Airways, IndiGo, SpiceJet and GoAir, to the Delhi High Court, seeking modification of its April 18 direction to DGCA to not permit variations in FDTLs.
     
     
    Flight AI 127 was bound for Chicago on May 9 with a flight time of 16 hours. However, it could not land there on time due to inclement weather and instead was diverted to nearby Milwaukee.
     
     
    The flight duration from Milwaukee to Chicago was 19 minutes. The flight carrying passengers who had already travelled for 16 hours, could have taken off in two hours and reached Chicago, but what played spoilsport was the duty hour of the crew -- which was already exhausted by then. Due to withdrawal of the variations, only one landing was permitted for the crew that day.
     
     
    According to Air India sources, the withdrawal of the variation of duty hours by DGCA following a high court order left the airline with no choice but to arrange for fresh crew which was transported by road to Milwaukee to take charge of the flight.
     
     
    The flight left for Chicago after a delay of over six hours. All this while, the passengers remained onboard the aircraft.
     
     
     
     
    But things did not end there. What caused more problem for Air India was stringent US guidelines, inviting the airline the charge for 'tarmac delay'. According to US guidelines, if passengers are on-board for more than four hours for international flights, the carrier is guilty of 'tarmac delay'.
     
     
    "The potential penalty to the carrier in such case is US$ 27,500 per passenger onboard, and with 323 passengers onboard, the penalty adds up to US$ 8.8 million," sources said, adding neither the passengers had to be put through such gruelling ordeal, nor the airline put to such a situation if variation in flying hours was allowed in such "extraordinary circumstances".
     
     
    Air India referred to this particular incident in its plea before the High Court on May 15. The court has sought the stands of the Centre and aviation regulator DGCA on the plea.
     
     
    "A diversion by its very nature is unscheduled -- diversion due to medical emergency or any other reason. In such cases unless dispensation (variation) is accorded, flights will be grounded and passengers put to untold hardships. This is not to mention the huge penalties involved," an airline official said.
     
     
    Among the 323 passengers in this particular flight, 41 were on wheelchair-bound and two infant. There was an autistic child on-board as well. This was her first trip and the paramedics had to be called in at Milwaukee as she was in distress.
     
     
    Milwaukee airport itself was in distress due to diverted flights and did not have a gate available for the passengers to disembark. The delay has had a snowballing effect in the entire operation at Chicago as the Delhi-bound flight was delayed by over 28 hours, causing harassment for other passengers who were booked in this flight in subsequent journeys.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    SC To Decide Navjot Singh Sidhu’s Fate In 1988 Road Rage Case On Tuesday

    The Supreme Court will on Tuesday pronounce its judgment on Punjab Tourism Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu’s appeal against a Punjab and Haryana High Court verdict sentencing him to three-year imprisonment in a 1988 road rage case.

    SC To Decide Navjot Singh Sidhu’s Fate In 1988 Road Rage Case On Tuesday

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: Sajjan Kumar To Undergo Lie-Detector Test On May 30

    A Delhi court on Monday issued directions for conducting a lie-detector test on Congress leader Sajjan Kumar on May 30 in connection with two 1984 anti-Sikh riot cases after he gave his consent for the same.

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: Sajjan Kumar To Undergo Lie-Detector Test On May 30

    Shashi Tharoor Charged With Abetment To Suicide In Wife Sunanda Pushkar Death Case

    Delhi Police on Monday filed a chargesheet in a court in Sunanda Pushkar's suicide case, accusing her husband and Congress leader Shashi Tharoor with abetment to suicide, a charge he dubbed "preposterous" and his party called "baseless".

    Shashi Tharoor Charged With Abetment To Suicide In Wife Sunanda Pushkar Death Case

    20-Year-Old Man, Lover Brutally Murdered In Punjab's Tarn Taran

    20-Year-Old Man, Lover Brutally Murdered In Punjab's Tarn Taran
    The deceased have been identified as Husanpreet Singh, a high-school graduate who has been helping his father in the fields, and Ramandeep Kaur.

    20-Year-Old Man, Lover Brutally Murdered In Punjab's Tarn Taran

    High-Profile Mumbai Police Officer Himanshu Roy Allegedly Commits Suicide

    High-Profile Mumbai Police Officer Himanshu Roy Allegedly Commits Suicide
    In a case supervised by Himanshu Roy as Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime) in Mumbai, two accused were sentenced to life imprisonment on the day he ended his life.

    High-Profile Mumbai Police Officer Himanshu Roy Allegedly Commits Suicide

    Indian-Origin Woman Sarbjit Kaur Found Dead In UK. Cops Suspect Husband Gurpreet Singh Killed Her

    Indian-Origin Woman Sarbjit Kaur Found Dead In UK. Cops Suspect Husband Gurpreet Singh Killed Her
    An Indian-origin businessman in the UK has been charged with his wife's murder, nearly three months after her body had been discovered in their home in Wolverhampton.

    Indian-Origin Woman Sarbjit Kaur Found Dead In UK. Cops Suspect Husband Gurpreet Singh Killed Her