Airports Face Fines For Passenger Chaos

2:40am UK, Sunday December 26, 2010

Andy Jack, Sky News Online

Airports could be fined millions of pounds for disrupting passengers' travel, under new plans being considered by the Government.


Snow ploughs clear the southern runway at Heathrow Airport, as travel chaos continues due to the adverse weather

Airports like Heathrow cannot be punished for passenger delays

Transport Secretary Philip Hammond says he wanted the air regulators to have new powers after Heathrow ground to a halt during the big freeze last week, ruining the holidays of tens of thousands of people.

Mr Hammond told The Sunday Times it was unacceptable that BAA - which runs Britain's busiest airport - faced no punishment from the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) under the current regime.

He said: "There should be an economic penalty for service failure. Greater weight needs to be given to performance and passenger satisfaction."

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Ministers are considering a new airport economic regulation bill, which would give more powers to impose fines for a wide range of service failures.

Under the existing system, fines can be imposed by the CAA for failures like passenger queues at security, and over cleanliness.

Airline passengers rest on the floor as they wait for flights in Heathrow airport's Terminal 3

Ministers are considering a new airport economic regulation bill

The maximum total penalty is said to be 7% of airport charges, resulting in a potential sum of £63m.

BAA chief executive Colin Matthews announced he would forgo his annual bonus after last week's extended disruption at Heathrow.

The firm, which is owned by a Spanish conglomerate, found itself unable to shift snow and ice from runways and aircraft gates, paralysing the gateway for several days.


Prime Minister David Cameron was among those who voiced his frustration at the disruption, and BAA has since launched an investigation into the problems.

There were also flight disruptions at Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow, as well as Gatwick, London Luton and London City airports and across Europe.

The EU Commission slammed the continent's air travel disruption as unacceptable and urged airports to "get serious" about better planning for bad weather.

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