US to 'beat up' airlines when necessary for passengers - transport chief
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[July 21, 2023]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said
he is willing to take a hard line with airlines when necessary as the
Biden administration vows a sweeping upgrade in passenger consumer
protections.
"We're continuing to work to make sure that airlines live up to their
obligations, which we will enforce," Buttigieg told Reuters in a
wide-ranging interview on Thursday.
U.S. airlines have sparred with the administration in recent years over
responsibility for flight delays, passenger rights, landing slots and
other issues. Carriers and a federal audit say the Federal Aviation
Administration must boost air traffic control staffing.
Buttigieg has opened numerous investigations and imposed fines for
carrier misbehavior. President Joe Biden has often criticized airlines,
saying in February "airlines can’t treat your child like a piece of
baggage."
While Buttigieg works with airlines when possible, he added: "We're
going to beat 'em up when we think that's important to get passengers a
better deal."
Buttigieg said he is "in the middle of what I intend to be the biggest
expansion of passenger rights in years. And there are tensions that are
naturally going to come through with that."
United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby recently suggested the Federal Aviation
Administration had "failed us" before changing his tone.
In late June and early July, United had higher cancellations that it
blamed in part on air traffic control staffing issues.
"It was another scenario where you had the rest of the system seem to
recover and one player struggling - so certainly something we're looking
at it," Buttigieg said.
In late 2022, Southwest Airlines suffered an operational meltdown after
bad weather that also affected peers was compounded by its legacy
scheduling system. Buttigieg has an ongoing investigation into
Southwest's meltdown but he declined to discuss findings.
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Secretary of Transportation Pete
Buttigieg listens as U.S. President Joe Biden speaks about the
airline industry and consumer protections from the South Court
Auditorium on the White House grounds in Washington, U.S., May 8,
2023. REUTERS/Leah Millis/
Buttigieg said the U.S. airline industry has improved over last
year, citing lower cancellation rates and adding "the schedules are
more realistic, certainly the outcomes are better."
The Transportation Department plans to propose new rules requiring
airlines compensate passengers for significant flight delays or
cancellations when carriers are responsible.
Buttigieg said the July 1 rollout of 5G C-Band has gone better than
expected with minimal disruptions. Last month, he warned of
potential delays for airplanes without upgraded radio altimeters.
Buttigieg said airlines were largely prepared but that "took a lot
of pressure. It took multiple moments where we had to really just
make sure they could read our body language that we really were
serious... I don't think the airlines believed us early on."
The FAA has been without a Senate-confirmed administrator since
April 2022 and a prior nominee withdrew in March.
Buttigieg said the White House was close to naming a new nominee.
The White House has been considering naming former Deputy FAA
Administrator Michael Whitaker, sources told Reuters, but Buttigieg
declined to identify the expected nominee.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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