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Delta Connection flight 5059, operated by ExpressJet, was supposed to go to Atlanta. Instead, the airline turned it into a charter flight for the team. Delta insisted that all passengers were “accommodated” but it seems to ignore that fact that these passengers paid to fly on flight 5059 and were delayed in their travels. One missed a funeral. Airlines continue to treat such itineraries as merely aspirational. So long as they get a passenger to a location, they insist that they have no liability or responsibility for the loss of hours, bad alternative seating or hassle. The passenger’s time is legally irrelevant.
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Airline lobbyists have been uniformly successful in blocking efforts
in Congress to guarantee the rights of passengers. Average people remain
a captive audience to airlines. I know of no other business that can
routinely violate agreements or contracts and remain immune from
liability. While passengers contract to fly on particular flights,
airlines can treat such flights (and a passenger’s time) as fungible and
fluid. Now it appears that a basketball team is an additional cause for
“mechanical problems” or cancellations for the least valuable
travelers.
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