Lawmakers on Tuesday castigated airline executives in a hearing looking into what went wrong in the now famous April 9 incident when a United Airlines passenger was violently dragged off an overbooked flight.
United (UAL) CEO Oscar Munoz and executives from prominent US airlines testified before the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure in what its Chair, Bill Shuster (R-Penn.), described as “a tough hearing.” The tone was one of bipartisan anger. Even for the most laissez-faire members of Congress, a common refrain emerged in the committee, best illustrated by Rep. Brian Babin (R-Tex.): “I don’t like regulation—I’m a conservative Republican. But…”
Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) took an even harsher tone, beginning his questions with an attempt at a joke-question: “Why do you hate the American people?”
The message was clear: Either improve customer service or face government meddling.
In the weeks since the incident occurred – and which took on a life of its own through social media – United, as well as other airlines, have announced policy changes aimed at avoiding similar public relations nightmares.
Munoz also apologized a few more times during the lawmakers’ venting. “It was a mistake of epic proportion,” he said. “It’s horrible calculus. Do you make the flight bad for 150 or make it bad for two or three.”
Munoz promised to avoid situations that cause “impossible” situations and told the committee the airline had changed its compensation strategy to entice passengers to voluntarily give up their seats, authorizing a fat carrot of up to $10,000 in compensation.
Alaska Airlines’ (ALK) Senior Vice President Joseph Sprague noted a similar, but more open-ended policy. He said the airline will give passengers money and miles “on the spot” via an “empowerment toolkit” app in the crew’s mobile devices. Senior vice president of American Airlines’ (AAL), Kerry Philipovitch, said it did not have an upper limit of what they would pay volunteers on overbooked flights.
For passengers, this pivot by airlines to pay what is necessary to buy back a reservation from a customer is both a boon and the most efficient method, as a Stanford economist told Yahoo Finance in April.
Employees’ ability to settle issues by whipping out the company checkbook to placate a bumped passenger with cash or miles is often dependent on passengers knowing their rights and what the airline is obligated to do to hold up its end of the bargain, or the “contract of carriage.”
Throughout the committee hearing, members of Congress referred to these contracts of carriage and their immense length: United’s contract is around 37,000 words long, which is 11,000 words longer than Truman Capote’s “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” While the contract stipulates what a passenger is entitled to in case of a long delay, missed connection, or lost bags, airlines may not volunteer to hold up their end of the deal. In many cases, a passenger must be proactive and knowledgeable of their rights.