Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Stranded SkyGreece Passengers To Hear From Canadian Transportation Agency

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2015 11:30 AM
  • Stranded SkyGreece Passengers To Hear From Canadian Transportation Agency
TORONTO — Passengers who were stranded by the demise of SkyGreece Airlines may get some idea today about how quickly a federal agency will deal with a complaint on their behalf.
 
The Canadian Transportation Agency is giving the airline until 5 p.m. eastern time to respond to a complaint filed by passenger rights advocate Gabor Lukacs.
 
Lukacs has called for the agency to order the airline to rebook its stranded passengers on other airlines within 24 hours and put up $8.7 million of security to cover passenger claims.
 
He's asked for an expedited process to handle the complaint and the agency has given SkyGreece until 5 p.m. today to respond — if it doesn't the expedited process will go ahead.
 
Some passengers have already returned to Canada, including Peter Fatiou and his son Stavros who went to Greece for a family wedding and then had to pay their own way home to Toronto on Sunday.
 
"It's frustrating, it's nerve wracking and it's five and a half thousand dollars later," Stavros Fatiou told CTV News.
 
SkyGreece said last week that the flight disruption was due to technical issues and financial setbacks resulting from the Greek economic crisis, but didn't elaborate.
 
The airline called the flight cancellations a temporary situation and said its operations were expected to resume soon.
 
The airline was founded in 2012 and started operations in 2014 with one plane, which is now parked at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
 
SkyGreece is headquartered in Athens, Greece, but in his application to the Canadian Transportation Agency, Lukacs said the company is registered as a Quebec corporation and owned or controlled by Canadians.

MORE National ARTICLES

Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate

Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate
Residents in southeastern British Columbia are regrouping from an immense and fast-spreading wildfire that has so far wiped out 30 homes and forced hundreds to flee with little more than the clothes on their backs.

Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate

Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism

Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism
QUEBEC — The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police is calling on the public for help in detecting people who are becoming radicalized.

Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism

Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons
OTTAWA — The federal government is delaying implementation of regulations intended to help police trace crime guns — the seventh time it has put off the measures.

Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

The Conservative leader is stressing the latter at a stop in Fredericton, N.B., where he is promising to add 6,000 people to bolster the reserve ranks of the Canadian Forces reserves.

Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court
Was Mike Duffy railroaded by a group of Stephen Harper's aides into telling the public he would repay his Senate expenses, or was Duffy the one shaking down the PMO?

The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations

WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations
Dr. Ophira Ginsburg, a clinician and researcher at Women's College Hospital in Toronto, takes on the new role in Geneva on Oct. 1.

WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations