Weitz & Luxenberg Affirms Rights of Passengers Following Plane Debacles. Get a free assessment of your plane lawsuit below.
A recent snowstorm on the East Coast shaped into a crisis for JetBlue airlines. On Valentine’s Day, the airline’s operational shortcomings due to the storm led to 1,096 canceled flights and thousands of stranded passengers. This has prompted some lawsuit inquiries from those who were left on planes without food or water for many hours.
Many fliers were confined on planes at JFK International Airport as long as
10 hours. JetBlue said it will compensate customers for the delays with vouchers
ranging from $25 to the full fare. Yet for the travelers trapped onboard with
scant food, and having missed vacation and business events, this may seem paltry
compensation.
“The amounts being offered to these unfortunate travelers
is pitiful,” said Lawrence Goldhirsch, an attorney with the Negligence
department at Weitz & Luxenberg, P.C. Goldhirsch, an expert in aviation law,
is author of “The Warsaw Convention Annotated: A Legal Handbook,” considered by
the legal community a bible for international aviation.
In a bid to win
back its customer-service driven image, JetBlue publically instituted a Bill of
Rights, which commits the company to compensate passengers for various kinds of
flight disruptions. But that carrier isn’t alone in stranding flyers during
inclement weather. American Airlines experienced similar delays in December when
passengers rerouted from Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport during storms,
sat on the tarmac at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, with no food and
dirty toilets.
These recent incidents recalls a similar scenario from
1999, when Northwest Airlines stranded passengers up to nine hours, ultimately
settling a lawsuit including claims of “false imprisonment” for around $7
million. Flyers of the airline had spent hours on planes sitting on the tarmac
in a snowstorm in Detroit. Allowing those planes to return to terminals to drop
off passengers would have helped mitigate the discomfort, an error the aviation
industry continues to make.
Goldhirsch pointed out that the US
Department of Transportation does not have any limitation of damages that may be
claimed by passengers for delay. “Only international passengers are limited by a
treaty—the Montreal Convention—when they are delayed on such flights. Even in
those cases, the limitation is approximately $4,500 per passenger, depending on
the length of delay and other circumstances."
Those who have been
affected by an aviation incident may complete the form below for a free legal
review of their potential plane lawsuit case. A representative of our firm will
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