2Smashed4U
Banned
Man, the front page of Reddit is *brutal* right now towards United
I have also never seen someone asked to leave a plane after boarding it. Seems to me that someone issued this man a boarding pass and let them on the plane. Once I'm seated? GTFO.
But I didn't sign up to be part of an algorithm that assumes 10% of us will be late because you aren't on time from your previous flight. I intend to make it to my final destination, and have a ticket that you sold me that gets me a seat that will get me there.
If your algorithm breaks you need to keep offering more money until the plane isn't full. Or, you need to make it very clear WHO is last in line and sell me a cheaper ticket. "This ticket is half off, but you are first to be bumped. If you are bumped, we'll give you a hotel and put you on a guaranteed flight the next morning"
It needs to be clear what is happening because travel is a real pain in the ass already, and having the potential to have a ticket you pay money for not be honored by the people who sold it to you is fucking insane.
NOTICE—OVERBOOKING OF FLIGHTS
Airline flights may be overbooked, and there is a slight chance that a seat will not be available on a flight for which a person has a confirmed reservation. If the flight is overbooked, no one will be denied a seat until airline personnel first ask for volunteers willing to give up their reservation in exchange for compensation of the airline's choosing. If there are not enough volunteers, the airline will deny boarding to other persons in accordance with its particular boarding priority. With few exceptions, including failure to comply with the carrier's check-in deadline (carrier shall insert either ‘‘of l minutes prior to each flight segment'' or ‘‘(which are available upon request from the air carrier)'' here), persons denied boarding involuntarily are entitled to compensation. The complete rules for the payment of compensation and each airline's boarding priorities are available at all airport ticket counters and boarding locations. Some airlines do not apply these consumer protections to travel from some foreign countries, although other consumer protections may be available. Check with your airline or your travel agent
Yeah it is a bad policy based on making more $ as a certain amount of people don't make a flight typically so they try to sell those seats twice.
No, actually they stopped at offering an $800 voucher. And that was after initially offering $400. They could have offered more before forcing people to take their $800 offer. That's called unequal bargaining.
I've never experienced any transportation-company overbooking tickets. That shit can't be legal in EU?
All of you playing devil's advocate for United, fuck off. They shouldn't overbook, and if they have to to stay afloat, offer ridiculous sums of money to the volunteers, or send the employees by bus.
Overbooking provides tangible benefits to passengers, allowing increased flexibility in reservation policies and decreased overall costs. As always, these benefits come at a price: decreased reliability of performance and inadequate compensation for those bumped. The federal regulations governing these problems have failed to provide passengers with either adequate compensation or predictable performance due to fundamental gaps in passenger information. Furthermore, by under-compensating bumped passengers, these regulations encourage airlines to overbook, penalizing those airlines which choose not to overbook and those passengers with a high value on performance. While the system functions the majority of the time, federal regulations allow a shift in the cost of overbooking from airlines to passengers and from airlines with a high propensity to overbook to those with a low propensity to do so. Eliminating the federal caps on compensation would allow airlines to maintain current overbooking practices, while preventing them from under-compensating bumped passengers and denying a competitive advantage to those airlines that overbook aggressively.
I don't get the posts that talk about the legality of it. We get it. It's completely legal. That doesn't mean that it's okay. They could have figured out a better way to make this work (more money, chartering are things I've seen here and yeah, would work) but they instead chose to be assholes and now they have a huge nightmare on their hands. I've seen this story everywhere today and they eff'd up.
Anyways, my main question is this: can the guy actually get money from United out of this via court? What are the legal arguments he could use here?
Why would anyone take voluntary you say? Well, it's guaranteed compensation. Waiting till it's random and you have a very small chance of getting selected.
What I don't get is that wouldn't it have been overall cheaper for United Airlines to just buy tickets for their employees for another flight, even from another airline? What is so important about these employees in particular that they had to leave on this specific flight?
Gotta remember, while a lot of people are regular flies, there are probably way more who only end up taking a trip every couple of years. You could give me $2000 in airline miles and I wouldn't really have anything to do with them. Maybe fly a friend out to visit or something. But then I'd be making my friend suffer through flying with United, so that's almost cruel.
If it was $800 cash so I could go have a few drinks at the airport bar before going to my hotel for the night, that's a totally different story. Airline miles aren't going to pay me for missing a day of work because you bumped me. They won't cover my car payments or my rent. (I mean I guess you could buy tickets for friends and have them reimburse you for a lower amount to be a nice person or something, but that's about it.)
Sorry, just because you put something in T&C's or a contract doesn't mean it will hold up or mean anything in a court.
We also need to remember that corporations put things in the "small print" that are not legally sound. Just cause it's in there doesn't mean they have the right.
There's also a legal principle called adhesion contracts. That's where these terms and conditions are presented as "take it or leave it" to the other party, in this case, the passengers. Courts do not always uphold these contracts, because there is inequality in bargaining between the parties. And honestly, I think the U.S. legal system should do more to discourage them and provide better rights to the party that had no ability to negotiate.
In the current situation, by contrast, the passenger paid for a flight to his destination and United didn't fulfill its obligation when they removed him with force from his seat prior to takeoff. If it says in the terms and conditions that this is something that could happen, then those terms and conditions are not fair and should not be there.
Federal law doesn't allow an airline to be arbitrary and capricious with how it selects passengers to be physically removed from a plane so that airline employees can have a seat.
If this passenger had walked off and then given them hell, he would have got jack shit. Nobody talks about it in the news, and he gets what's federally mandated and not a red cent more. Instead, he now has a huge legal settlement awaiting him for United's sloppy conduct.
If you volontary forfeit your seat for compensation, you per definition renegociate your contract with the agreement of both parties.
So yes Of Course the issue is that this person DIDN'T agree to it, which means that by forcibly removing him, the airline unilaterally changed the contract; which in case you don't know, they don't have any right to do.
lol was this you:
"Rules set down by the U.S. Department of Transportation allow for airline customers to receive up to $1300 if they voluntarily give up their seats, but the world's largest airline has been bumping people off their flights by force.
The DOT has now publicly reprimanded the airline for the second time in four years, and ordered the company to pay a penalty of $750,000 for not compensating passengers.
"
Apparently they can't.
Read more: http://www.*****************/news/a...fine-buy-iPads-train-staff.html#ixzz4dse9Rr3d
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I don't know but if they went through all this trouble, then it was a pilot or flight attendant who had to be in Louisville in order not to cancel a different flight and inconvenience all those people.
What about randomly selecting people until someone says yes? Even although legally they are compensated within the "involuntary bumping" bracket, because yes, $800 compensation is for "involuntary" per government flight regulations. Because they say yes does that then mean they are volunteering?
You get paid the higher price when it's involuntary (that is legally mandated by law), so what exactly are the two people who left prior to this man? Are they volunteers, are they involuntarily bumped, or are they now able to go after legal action for a breach of contract? To me, even although they agreed, they were involuntarily bumped (no one took the lower offer by choice, everyone waited till random selection started). My belief is the airline is able to ask for both volunteers, and then involuntarily select people at random even in the cabin.
What if the plane is in the sky? At that point can they pick random names, turn the plane around and drop them off? Or do they just stop at the nearest airport.
Someone with knowledge of an airport, once they do involuntary at the gate, do you have to accept or can you say no and they move onto the next random selection?
So what is the literal point where they can stop asking for volunteers to leave?
Can someone confirm that the $800 is actually in cash?
I believe they offer the money in United $. So you would get $800 redeemable against future United flights, right?
I've never seen it offered as cash, it's ALWAYS as credit to the airline.
From what you've said it's as I thought, boarding is still classed as when you're sitting on the seat, and not just at the gate?
What is it about this story that people are so interested in?
It's freaking everywhere!
Wow, that reddit censorship on the original video certainly did backfire.
US Transportation Code defines boarding as ending when the doors to the plane are shut.
Once the outer doors have been closed, boarding is over and the plane is legally an "aircraft in flight" even if it is still on the ground. The plane is still considered "in flight" when it lands, up until the moment when the doors open again.
These are important distinctions under the law.
When airline employees named four customers who had to leave the plane, three of them did so. The fourth person refused to move, and police were called, United spokesman Charlie Hobart said.
...i thought [removed] was the joke
Holy shit, literally every link on the front page of videos is related to United Airlines right now, lmao
Holy shit, literally every link on the front page of videos is related to United Airlines right now, lmao
SNIP
For what it's worth that is because you can buy open tickets that allow travel to your destination with flexibility. Only being valid for this flight just counters that. You cannot get on another aeroplane or leave at any time you want.
Bumping happens on EasyJet as well
http://www.easyjet.com/en/help/at-the-airport/oversales
The debate is boarding still includes the plane. In the situation that I'm wrong are you simply saying it is not allowed once seated?
How are airlines able to do it without having been taken to the cleaners before now?
My mom was a gate agent many years ago, from asking her the plane is not officially "boarded" until the door is closed. Flight attendant will confirm all passengers are seated and door is closed then you take off.
US Transportation Code defines boarding as ending when the doors to the plane are shut.
Once the outer doors have been closed, boarding is over and the plane is legally an "aircraft in flight" even if it is still on the ground. The plane is still considered "in flight" when it lands, up until the moment when the doors open again.
These are important distinctions under the law.
I can only imagine you are typing this with a "Rage Against The Machine" song playing in the background.
If you are asked by security to leave a fucking airplane, stand up like a big boy and leave the fucking airplane. It's not the lunch counter in Greensboro.
A grown man doesn't throw a tantrum over a god damn seat in a plane.
Jesus. Are you just spending your days screaming at cashiers that shortchange you a buck?
Holy batman, big post! Can you link to anything that says that? I've been pulling my hair out all night trying to solve this goose chase I started myself. Other points you made to me I've either been schooled on by others, or found myself. I now know being picked means "not having a choice", as in it can be forced legally, but I will still stand-by for the airline's sake during this mess on the plane they should just have gone to another passenger when this passenger did not want to comply.
I guess if that is true they can state "denied boarding" is any time up until the doors close? Not just boarding ends after the gates.
I also know you're unlikely to get picked for involuntary, the odds are so low. Chances are in most cases people will snap up the voluntary rewards as it will only ever be a handful of seats at a time (some people will fly on a later flight just to get to go in 1st class!).
https://apnews.com/ae81a66dbc124acbad52e3cf8de9617d
He was the last person, just accept his word of being a doctor and move on and ask someone else!
I've seen passengers denied boarding even after doors are closed and the aircraft has pushed back from the gate. Crew did additional math and figured out there was a necessary weight restriction so they had to go back to the gate and deplane people. (They deplaned nonrevs and standbys, avoiding a DB situation.) You're not really 100% certain you're on the flight until it's in the air!
United Training Video...
How does this happen? They make offers for people to leave and double down when nobody bites? Then they randomly select pepople to be kicked off who had legal entitlement to the service in which they had paid for?
Sounds like one backwards ass company to me. Shameful.
If I spend $200+ of my to take a flight, I ain't moving a goddamn inch on that plane until I land.I can only imagine you are typing this with a "Rage Against The Machine" song playing in the background.
If you are asked by security to leave a fucking airplane, stand up like a big boy and leave the fucking airplane. It's not the lunch counter in Greensboro.
A grown man doesn't throw a tantrum over a god damn seat in a plane.
Jesus. Are you just spending your days screaming at cashiers that shortchange you a buck?
......
These are important distinctions under the law.
Don't care if this was under their legal authority. I will never fly United ever again.
Don't care if this was under their legal authority. I will never fly United ever again.
I was wondering about this point. I'm glad you did your homework.US Transportation Code defines boarding as ending when the doors to the plane are shut.
Once the outer doors have been closed, boarding is over and the plane is legally an "aircraft in flight" even if it is still on the ground. The plane is still considered "in flight" when it lands, up until the moment when the doors open again.
These are important distinctions under the law.
I can only imagine you are typing this with a "Rage Against The Machine" song playing in the background.
If you are asked by security to leave a fucking airplane, stand up like a big boy and leave the fucking airplane. It's not the lunch counter in Greensboro.
A grown man doesn't throw a tantrum over a god damn seat in a plane.
Jesus. Are you just spending your days screaming at cashiers that shortchange you a buck?
It's totally legal, especially if it's prior to boarding the plane. What's grey is once everyone's already seated on the plane.