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xXTomcatXx

Vapers are like cross-fitters, they’ll let EVERYONE know what their favorite interest is.

I still see a Gator as his avatar. As much as he tries he can’t seem to keep the ruse together.

$1350 is the max. That’s the law. Also, may want to read up on the Good Doctor Dao. His story is questionable at best. I’ll copy paste the summary I posted elsewhere.

My thoughts exactly.

I’m guessing you have no idea what the difference is between an involuntary and voluntary bump or what your rights are regarding the latter. Read the Carriage Contract, butkus.

The involuntary bump would have netted this guy $1350 cash.

Wrong. Read the UA’s Carriage Contract. Do you people seriously not bother to read what you agree to? Voluntary bumps they can offer whatever they want in the form of vouchers. Involuntary bumps are 400% of your ticket value in cash plus any incurred expenses (like lost time for work, hotel, meals, etc.). He was

I totally agree. I just found it fascinating once I started going down the rabbit hole of public documents telling the twisted tale of Doctor Dao. Personally, I don’t the guy should be allowed to practice medicine whatsoever, but that’s just me. Especially if you’ve been convicted of felonies related to practicing

Lol. Sorry, but I’m afraid you didn’t read closely. The $800 voucher offer was for voluntary bumping. Involuntary bumping is automatically 400% of the ticket’s value (in cash, that’s the law), plus any expenses incurred as a result of the delay up to $1350 (like say missed work hours). Unlike Voluntary bumping,

Lol Nope. You should dig into this guy’s story a bit. It’s shockingly fascinating (although it really shouldn’t have any bearing on what happened on the flight). To summarize:

He was getting $13oo for this involuntary bump. That’s the legal maximum per FAA regulations.

If you don’t have a seat number you’re more likely to get involuntarily bumped. That’s where the bigger payday is. Whereas those with seat assignments have a lower chance of being selected for voluntary bumping. It’s playing the odds.

The important thing to realize is that these travel vouchers don’t actually equate to their stated amounts. In other words a $200 voucher might only cost the company $120.

Breaking up these airlines hurts pricing for the consumer. There’s a ton of overhead that gets consolidated in these mergers that leads to a more affordable business. Break those companies a part and the consumer has to eat all of that new overhead. A lot of times when these mergers happen they’re doing it to get new

No voluntary bumps occurred and no one bit (the offer was allegedly maxed at $800). At that point they switched to involuntary which randomly selected the four passengers.

You can’t realistically expect an airline to independently verify each passengers claim. And even more importantly that they have pending appointments.

They technically did give him the maximum. When you’re involuntarily bumped from a flight, you automatically get the max compensation per FAA regulations ($1350 I believe).

“No idea what this man does precisely medically, but I’d be royally pissed at my GP if he canceled on me without notice late on a Sunday.”

Next passenger: “I’m a doctor with patients tomorrow too.”

You can thank Carter and the Airline Deregulation Act.