No man left behind - Involuntary bumping seems to be a thing of the past

Even before the headlines, airlines were changing their ways

IF AVIATION had an astrological sign, 2017 would surely be the Year of the

Bump. Most infamously, it was the year that a United Airlines passenger who

refused to leave an overbooked flight in April was dragged violently from the

plane. There followed airline policy changes to reduce involuntary bumping, a

novel system to make bumping less inconvenient, and even bipartisan action in

Congress to render involuntary bumping illegal.

Such headlines suggest that the practice is spiralling out of control. In fact

it is at its lowest level since the government began recording data in 1995,

according to a Department of Transportation report issued last week that covers

12 American airlines. In the second quarter of 2017, 0.44 passengers per

100,000, or about one in 227,000, were forced to miss a flight because their

plane was overlooked. That is the lowest quarterly rate on record, and a

significant drop from the 0.62 rate in the second quarter of 2016.

Could that just be a reaction to the PR nightmare that followed the dragging

incident? Not entirely. The first half of the year, most of which took place

before the United fiasco, also saw the lowest involuntary bumping rate of any

January-June period on record, 0.52 passengers per 100,000. Monthly data are

not available, so it is impossible to say how much the practice has declined

since April, but two things are clear. First, such denials-of-boarding were not

at their apex prior to the incident they already seemed to be in decline. And

second, it now appears to be completely on the way out.

Even if Congress does not ban it, airlines are stopping the practice

themselves. Southwest said this spring that it would cease overbooking flights.

United is working to bump passengers voluntarily, sometimes several days in

advance of flights, to avoid conflict. The Department of Transportation

recently fined Frontier Airlines for denying boarding to passengers without

first seeking volunteers. The practice used to make economic sense because it

allowed airlines to overbook flights without facing significant consequences if

too many people showed up to board. But, given the media fire that engulfed

United, the fear of self immolation is now too strong.

In any case, airlines now have other worries. The same Department of

Transportation report found that in June there were more delays and

cancellations compared with both June 2016 and May 2017. Complaints were also

up 7.7% from a year earlier. With profits still strong, carriers see little

need to antagonise travellers further by kicking them off flights against their

will. Involuntary bumping may have been the big aviation story in the first

half of the year but, as is often the case, it seems to have drawn our

attention after the worst of it had passed. The dragging incident appears not

to have been its apex but its last gasp.