Greysword
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2004
- Messages
- 2,075
Yes, and you are correct. I think we've kind of used this thread as an example to highlight the FAA rules on what the airline is liable for regarding denial of boarding, so the discussion has broadened beyond the scope of this one example.My point is WN could have made the change in a way that allowed it to make the change without owing the customer any compensation, other then allowing a cash refund. We don't know if WN took care of the fine print. The general rule is an airline can move you, in advance, from one flight to another flight for a variety of legitimate reasons without owing you any compensation.
If WN did change aircraft, move the flight times, or cancel the flight outright (for any reason), then this would not be a case of involuntary denial of boarding. However, most airlines simply make the change, not call, and sometimes send an email to the fact.
However if the WN did not make a schedule change, aircraft swap, or cancel the flight; rather, simply bump the OP, then it would seem the provisions would fall under the involuntary denial of boarding provisions (despite Katiee's objection to timing

In addition, WN has been fined for these shenanigans in the recent past, so I would not put it past them to simply continue the practice if it suits their business needs, especially since the bulk of WN fliers are not as experienced with the culture and rules of flying.
I bet if the OP told the agent on the phone that the Flyer Bill of Rights (or straight up say 14 CFR 250) would qualify this as IDB, thus cash compensation is required, the phone rep would have backed down quick and likely went onto another passenger (or at least called a supervisor). This is why I wanted our community to know and have the rules, just in case. They are not long, and a quick skim before traveling at least puts the thought in our heads. Having them on a tablet (iPad, Kindle, Nook, etc) takes hardly any space and makes it even better should the need arise to produce the info.