Trending

Airline Bumps 10-Year-Old Boy From Flight to Costa Rica

<div><p>After a flurry of conflict about best practices, another airline is making headlines after a 10-year-old boy was bumped from a flight with his family. </p><p>The Doyle family booked 4 tickets from Charlottetown, PEI to Costa Rica last August for their vacation over March Break this year. </p><p>A day before they set off for their holiday, Brett Doyle, the father of 2 went to check his family in online, but was unable to select a seat for his eldest son Cole. &nbsp;</p><div><figure><amp-img src="https://www.shared.com/content/images/2017/04/cole-doyle-10-stratford-15-04-17.jpg" srcset="https://www.shared.com/content/images/2017/04/cole-doyle-10-stratford-15-04-17_GH_content_550px.jpg 550w" sizes="89vw" title="" alt="" height="9" width="16" layout="responsive"></amp-img><figcaption class="op-vertical-center"><cite>CBC</cite></figcaption></figure></div><p>After hours on the phone with Air Canada, Brett's wife, Shanna, drove down to the airport where she was told their flight was oversold and her son had been bumped. </p><p>"The agent told us that the plane only had 28 seats, but that 34 tickets had been sold," Doyle said. "She said it was very unlikely that six people wouldn't show up for a flight over March break."</p><p><!-- [invalid-shortcode] --></p><p>Not leaving without their son, the family scrambled to catch a different Air Canada flight out of Moncton to meet their Costa Rica flight in Montreal. </p><p>Their luck did not change however, because the Moncton flight had been cancelled. The family-of-four then were forced to drive to Halifax, an almost 4 hour trip from their home, and stay overnight in a hotel. </p><p>Brett said that his family was offered a $1,600 voucher, which expires in one year. He had to negotiate with Air Canada to increase the voucher to $2,500 plus expenses, which is still less than the cost of the tickets for his family of 4. </p><div><figure><amp-img src="https://www.shared.com/content/images/2017/04/left-simon-shanna-and-cole-doyle-stratford-15-04-17.jpg" srcset="https://www.shared.com/content/images/2017/04/left-simon-shanna-and-cole-doyle-stratford-15-04-17_GH_content_550px.jpg 550w" sizes="89vw" title="" alt="" height="9" width="16" layout="responsive"></amp-img><figcaption class="op-vertical-center"><cite>CBC</cite></figcaption></figure></div><p><!-- [invalid-shortcode] --></p><p>"Without sounding greedy, what I'd really like is to experience the trip we had planned for so many months and this voucher isn't going to do that," <a href="http://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/air-canada-apologizes-for-bumping-10-year-old-boy-from-flight-to-costa-rica">he said</a>.</p><p>This story continues to<a href="https://www.shared.com/united-airlines-overbooked-a-flight-but-this-doctor-was-punished-for-their-mistake/"> highlight the airline industry's controversial practice of overselling flights </a>and bumping passengers from their seats.</p><p></p></div>

Related Articles