Travel
Southwest Airlines quietly rolls out a new compensation program for flight delays
This Southwest flight has an unconventional cabin crew on board
Southwest airline pilot introduces cabin crew family to passengers, featuring an air hostess mom, flight attendant daughters, and retired captain dad.
Humankind
Southwest Airlines said it launched a compensation program for flight delays as part of a $140 million U.S. Department of Transportation settlement over the carrier’s meltdown in December 2022 during a busy holiday travel period.
Southwest agreed in December 2023 to provide $90 million in travel vouchers of $75 or more over three years to passengers delayed at least three hours getting to their final destinations because of an airline-caused issue or cancellation and to start the program by April 30.
The airline said Monday it had quietly launched the program on April 16 and has already heard from a few thousand customers seeking vouchers.
The airline agreed to the compensation program after the holiday meltdown that resulted in 16,900 flight cancellations and stranded 2 million passengers. The settlement included a $35 million cash fine.
Will Southwest start assigning seats? CEO says the airline is weighing changes
A massive winter storm in December 2022 and subsequent chaos prompted travel horror stories such as people missing funerals or long-awaited holiday gatherings, passengers with canceled flights forced to make cross-country drives of 17 or more hours and some cancer patients being unable to get treatment.
The delay compensation program is part of the Biden administration’s aggressive efforts to get tough on airlines as it aims to require new passenger compensation. Vouchers will be awarded “upon request,” Southwest said.
Southwest CEO Bob Jordan said in December that, given its operational performance, the $30 million in vouchers annually was “the right number” to commit to.
Asked if Southwest would end the program after three years, Jordan said consumer programs “rarely change or go away.”
Rival U.S. airlines have not put in place similar programs and do not yet face a mandate to do so.
Enough with airline hidden fees: DOT rules take aim at ‘corporate rip-offs’
President Joe Biden said last May that the DOT would propose new rules requiring airlines to compensate passengers with cash for significant controllable flight delays or cancellations by the end of the year. The DOT has not issued its proposal, and Congress has declined to mandate compensation for delays in a pending aviation reform bill.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said last week Southwest under the delay compensation requirement will “really lead the market and it will be very interesting to see how other airlines respond – not as punishment but by way of competition.”
The DOT in 2022 asked carriers if they would pay at least $100 for delays of at least three hours caused by airlines and none agreed.
Most carriers – including Southwest – voluntarily committed in August 2022 to provide hotels, meals and ground transportation for airline-caused delays or cancellations but resisted providing cash compensation as is required in the European Union.