The final act of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg is taking Southwest Airlines to court on allegations the carrier is “illegally operating multiple chronically delayed flights and disrupting passengers’ travel.”
The troubles for Southwest Airlines continue to build up – this time, with a lawsuit from the U.S. Department of Transportation.
The agency is accusing the airline of “illegally operating multiple chronically delayed flights and disrupting passengers’ travel” on two routes across four states.
Southwest Accused of Chronic Delays From Chicago to Oakland, Baltimore to Cleveland
According to the lawsuit, Southwest is accused of operating two specific “chronically delayed flights.” The first one is between Chicago Midway Airport (MDW) and Oakland International Airport (OAK), while the other is between Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI) and Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE). Across the two routes, the Transportation Department alleges Southwest was responsible for 180 flight disruptions between April and August 2022.
A flight is considered “chronically delayed” if flown at least 10 times per month and it arrives more than a half-hour late over 50% of the time. In the case of Southwest, the Transportation Department claims Southwest operated the flights as “chronically delayed” over a span of five consecutive months, and that the carrier was “responsible for more than 90% of the disruptions for the two chronically delayed flights.”
“As part of our commitment to supporting passenger rights and fairness in the market for airline travel, we are suing Southwest Airlines for disrupting passengers’ travel with unlawful chronic flight delays,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement. “Today’s action sends a message to all airlines that the Department is prepared to go to court in order to enforce passenger protections.”
The department also took action against Frontier Airlines, fining the Denver-based carrier $650,000 in civil penalties for “multiple chronically delayed flights.” The carrier will pay half of that to the U.S. Treasury, with the other half suspended if Frontier does not have another chronically delayed flight in the next three years.
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