• Home
  • Post a press-release
  • Visibility packages
  • Subscribe email updates
  • Event Calendar
  • Contact

For Immediate Release | Official News Wire for the Travel Industry

Where press releases are breaking news

  • Home
  • Post a press-release
  • Visibility packages
  • Subscribe email updates
  • Event Calendar
  • Contact

What smart travelers know

April 5, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

A record-breaking number of Americans are traveling, but most are unprepared for the journey – more than 90% of US travelers don’t know their rights, according to AirHelp, advocate for air passengers.

For easy reference, they have compiled a brief overview of U.S. air passenger rights below, along with insider tips for smart travelers. Knowing your rights could make you eligible to claim compensation. These include what to do regarding:

  • Flight Delays
  • Cancellations
  • Bumping, Denied Boarding and Overbooking
  • Lost Luggage
  • Missed Connections
  • When to fly
  • How to pack
  • And more

Disruptions: If you are flying within the U.S. and you are denied boarding due to an overbooked flight, you may be eligible to claim 400% of the one-way fare to your destination in compensation, of a value up to $1,350. Also, for flight cancellations or lengthy delays, if you’re flying to the EU on an EU airline, or departing from an EU airport, you may be eligible to claim up to $700 per person in compensation under European law EC 261.

Lost Luggage: Did you know airlines that lose or damage travelers’ luggage are obligated to pay out compensation of $1,500 – $3,500 to impacted passengers and reimburse them for lost items? Many travelers are unaware of these rights. Whether a traveler is flying within the U.S. or to one of the other 120 countries that ratified the Montreal Convention, if that person experiences luggage issues while traveling, they may be entitled to compensation under air passenger rights laws, including U.S. national law and the Montreal Convention. In order to successfully get the compensation that they are entitled to, a passenger must file a claim before leaving the airport. Travelers should fill out a Property Irregularity Report (PIR) claim for misplaced luggage, including the case number of their bags. The more detailed the claim, the better off that passenger will be, including an itemized list of the contents of their luggage, including the value of each item.

Missed Connections: If flights are booked together under one reference code, passengers can claim $300 – $700 in compensation from the airlines if they miss a connecting flight due to an earlier disruption under EC 261.

Fly during off-peak days or times to avoid the largest crowds at airports. The late night flights are often the least crowded, which means that your flight may be less likely to be overbooked, and your wait time at security will be shorter.

Consider flying out of alternate airports, if your airport is known to have delays. If flights from one airport typically experience significant disruptions, you can anticipate the new screenings will create longer lines at security and additional delays. Look into flights through different airports that fit your travel needs.

Leave extra time for traveling to the airport. No matter when people are traveling, they should anticipate traffic near the airport and overcrowding inside, thanks to overtourism. Pack the car with your luggage the night before departing to help save precious time the day of. Schedule extra time for driving, plan to arrive at the airport at least three hours before takeoff, and be sure to leave ample time to get through lines at security in case of large crowds. If it is easy enough, travelers can also consider public transportation to eliminate parking fees and cut costs.

Be ready for longer lines at security. With larger flights, waiting for luggage can take a lot of extra time at the airport. For short trips, travelers may consider using only a carry-on item, as long as all items fall under TSA requirements.

Strategically pack your luggage to have your ID and all liquid items at the top so that they’re easily accessible to TSA staff.

Pack larger electronics at the top. In July 2018, the TSA announced rules that require electronics larger than a cellphone to be placed in separate screening bins. If you’re one of the many travelers who are opting to bring bags on board rather than pay money to check them, pack larger electronics at the top so they’re easy to remove and place in a separate screening bin.

Consider wearing a pullover jacket or sweatshirt instead of a zip-up – this will allow you to quickly get through security without having to worry about removing articles of clothing.

Bring chargers and extra entertainment for the airport. Sometimes, flight disruptions are inevitable, so consider packing an extra phone charger and book to take on the flight.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: Americans, and, announced, Aviation News, avoid, bags, better, bins, board, boarding, book, booked, breaking, Breaking Travel News, brief, bumping, cancellations, car, carry-on, case, check, claim, clothing, code, compensation, connecting, connecting flight, connections, convention, costs, countries, create, crowded, cut, damage, day, Days, delays, Delays Cancellations Bumping, denied, departing, Destination, different, disruption, disruptions, driving, due, earlier, EC, electronics, entertainment, EU, European, experience, experiences, extra, fall, fees, file, FIT, flight, flight cancellations, flight delays, flights, fly by, Flying, help, hours, ID, in, including, inside, Instead, issues, IT, items, journey, known, largest, late, law, laws, leave, leaving, less, likely, lines, liquid, list, lose, lost, lost luggage, LOT, luggage, Make, matter, May, miss, money, Montreal, Montreal Convention, most, national, needs, New, News articles, night, number, on board, one-way, only, opting, order, out, overbooked flight, overbooking, packing, parking, parking fees, passenger, passenger rights, passengers, pay, peak, People, phone, Place, plan, property, public, public transportation, ready, record, remove, report, require, requirements, rights, rules, s, save, schedule, screening, Security, short, shorter, significant, staff, successfully, takeoff, through, time, times, Tips, to, TO BE, TO DO, top, traffic, Transportation, Transportation News, Travel, Traveler, travelers, traveling, Travelwire News, trips, TSA, U.S, unaware, up, US, US travelers, using, value, wait, way, WHO, worry

American Airlines: New cabin, larger overhead luggage bins

April 2, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

American Airlines is starting scheduled flights with the first of its 100 new Airbus A321neo aircraft on order. These aircraft come equipped with an all-new cabin interior designed for enhanced passenger comfort and convenience, including larger Airspace XL overhead luggage bins that increase carry-on bag capacity.

American is the launch customer for the Airspace XL bins, which provide approximately 40 percent more overhead storage space for passengers on board the 196-seat aircraft. In addition to equipping its new A321neos with the XL bins, American also plans to retrofit its entire in-service fleet of earlier A321 models – more than 200 aircraft – with the cabin features included on the new A321neos.

Ingo Wuggetzer, Airbus’ Vice President of Cabin Marketing said: “We are very pleased that American Airlines’ first A321neos with the Airspace XL bins are now entering service. We constantly work with airline customers to improve our aircraft cabins, and American in particular played an instrumental role with us in developing our biggest and best overhead bins to date.”

The Airspace XL bins accommodate larger luggage – up 24” x 16” x 10” – allowing standard roll-on bags to be loaded on their sides instead of being inserted flat. This creates room for up to four bags in each bin instead of the current three. The larger bins will significantly reduce the number of passenger bags checked at the gate, and sent to the cargo hold.

American‘s selected cabin layout allows the airline greater flexibility in seating arrangements and use of cabin space. The two class cabin will gain an additional row of first-class seats, bringing the total to 20. Outfitting the A321neo with a free wireless inflight-entertainment (IFE) system allows passengers to select a wide-range of options from their own devices. LED mood lighting will enhance the cabin environment.

Powered by CFM LEAP-1A engines and ETOPS certified for lengthy over water flights, the A321neo will allow American to carry larger loads on its longer, more densely travelled routes such as Los Angeles and Phoenix to Orlando, or West Coast hubs to Hawaii.

 

The A321neo is the largest member of the A320 Family, seating up to 240 passengers, depending on cabin configuration. Incorporating the latest engines, aerodynamic advances, and cabin innovations, the A321neo offers a reduction in fuel consumption of at least 15 percent per seat from day

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, Aneos, Angeles, arrangements, Aviation News, aviation-website, bag, bags, best, biggest, bins, bins American, board, Breaking Travel News, bringing, cabin, cabins, capacity, cargo, cargo hold, carry-on, certified, class, coast, come, comfort, consumption, Corporate News, current, customer, customers, date, day, designed, devices, earlier, engines, entertainment, environment, ETOPS, Family, Features,, first, flat, fleet, flights, free, fuel, fuel consumption, Gate, greater, Hawaii, hubs, improve, in, included, including, increase, inflight, innovations, Instead, interior, largest, LATEST, launch, LED, Los Angeles, luggage, Marketing, member, nbsp, New, News articles, number, offers, on board, options, order, Orlando, over, overhead bin, overhead bins, passenger, passengers, percent, Phoenix, plans, powered, president, range, reduce, reduction, Retrofit, role, room, routes, row, s, said, scheduled, scheduled flights, seat, seating, seats, selected, service, significantly, space, standard, Storage, system, to, TO BE, total, tourism, Transportation News, Travel Destination News, travelled, Travelwire News, up, US, use, vice president, water, We, West, West Coast, wireless, work, x, XL, XL bins, XL overhead

Search



Recent Articles

  • Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) situation in Thailand as of 28 February 2021, 11.30 Hrs.
  • Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) situation in Thailand as of 27 February 2021, 11.30 Hrs.
  • Seychelles Tourism Board’s Annual GCC Roadshow Goes Virtual
  • From Airline to Landline: United Offers Seamless Travel from Denver International Airport to Breckenridge and Fort Collins
  • Newly formed Thai Airlines Association names inaugural President
  • American Airlines and Deloitte Pioneer Market-Based Solution to Reduce Carbon Emissions from Air Travel
  • Provincial entry and exit rules as Thailand further eases COVID-19 control measures from 22 February 2021
  • Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) situation in Thailand as of 26 February 2021, 11.30 Hrs.
  • ‘Lutetia by Lebua: The Vertical Pop-up’ immersive experience open from 2 March to 25 April 2021
  • Hyatt House Nashville Airport Celebrates Official Opening

Copyright © 2021 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in