
Surveys show Canadians increasingly frustrated by lengthy air passenger complaint process
CBC
Internal surveys conducted by the agency responsible for enforcing air passenger protection rules shows a growing level of dissatisfaction with the time it takes to resolve complaints.
The quasi-judicial Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) is tasked with enforcing rules that require an airline to compensate passengers when a flight is delayed or cancelled for a reason that is within the airline's control.
Since those rules came into force in 2019, the agency has been flooded with thousands of complaints from passengers who claim airlines have denied them compensation.
CTA officials told a parliamentary committee in November that it can take as long as 18 months to resolve a case.
The agency's internal client satisfaction surveys — four of which were obtained by CBC News through an access to information request — show an increasing level of frustration with delays since the compensation rules came into effect.
The 2019 survey suggests that 25 per cent of passengers were either dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with the time it took for the agency to process their complaint. That number jumped to 71 per cent in the 2022 survey.
Campbell Hennessy, who waited nearly two years for his complaint to be resolved, isn't surprised by the results. He said the process can almost feel like a court case, given the number of documents that have to be submitted and reviewed at various stages.
"It's quite an onerous process for a citizen to undertake," he said.
But despite the lengthy process, Hennessy said his overall experience with the agency was a good one and the CTA staff seemed knowledgeable.
"From everything I saw, they were helpful, respectful the whole way through," he said.
Roughly 20 per cent of respondents to the three surveys between 2019 and 2021 said they were dissatisfied with the quality of service they received from the agency. Seventy-two per cent of respondents told the 2021 survey they had an good experience overall with the agency.
But the lengthy wait times appear to be having an impact on those favourable reviews. Just over half — 53 per cent — told the 2022 survey they weren't happy with their overall experience.
Matt Malone, a law professor who filed the access to information request and provided the survey documents to CBC, said the results suggest Canadians are losing confidence in the agency.
"I think the survey numbers capture that Canadians have lost faith in the agency," he said.