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Senators urge Trump reconsider dropping Biden's airline compensation plan

A group of Democratic Senators has urged the Trump Administration to reconsider its decision to scrap a plan from the previous administration that would have required airlines to compensate passengers in cash when carriers cause flight disruptions. In December, under the then-President Joe Biden's administration, the U.S. Department of Transportation sought public comments in a regulatory process about whether airlines should have to pay up $775 per passenger to compensate for delays they cause. USDOT announced in December that it would be dropping the compensation plan and considering revoking Biden regulations that required airlines and ticket agents disclose service fees along with airfares.

The letter was signed by Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Ed Markey (D-OR), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Kirsten Gillibrand (D) and Jack Reed.

Sean Duffy's spokesperson did not comment immediately on Tuesday, but stated that some rules adopted or proposed under Biden had "gone beyond what Congress required by statute" and we plan to revisit these extra-statutory requirements. A spokesperson for Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy did not immediately comment on Tuesday, but said that previously some rules proposed or adopted under Biden "went beyond what Congress has required by statute and we intend to reconsider those extra-statutory requirements."

Airlines have pushed for the Trump administration to do more and praised their decision to cancel the Biden Plan. USDOT has also taken steps to reverse Biden’s airline consumer initiatives. In May, Justice Department dropped the lawsuit filed by Biden's administration against Southwest Airlines in its final days. The suit accused Southwest Airlines of operating flights that were chronically delayed.

(source: Reuters)