JetBlue Airways has been fined $2 million by the US Department of Transportation for its chronic flight delays. This move marks the first time the department has imposed a penalty against an airline’s unrealistic scheduling.
The penalty addresses the flights that have consistently arrived 30 minutes late consecutively for several months. According to the Transportation Department, this misleads the passengers. The department discovered in their investigation that the airline had four chronically delayed routes. These routes had at least 154 delays between June 2022 and November 2023.
This includes the route between New York’s JFK Airport and Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. There are also the Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Orlando as well as the Windsor Locks, Connecticut, and JFK routes.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said, “Illegal chronic flight delays make flying unreliable for travelers. Today’s action puts the entire airline industry on notice that we expect their flight schedules to reflect reality.”
He added, “The department will enforce the law against airlines with chronic delays or other unrealistic scheduling practices in order to protect healthy competition in commercial aviation and ensure passengers are treated fairly.”
$2 Million Penalty for Flight Delays
JetBlue is set to pay $1 million to the US treasury while the remaining $1 million will compensate customers. Here, passengers get at least $75 for future delays of three hours or more until next year.
JetBlue said in a statement, “We appreciate how important it is to our customers to arrive to their destinations on-time and work very hard to operate our flights as scheduled.” The airline added, “While we’ve reached a settlement to resolve this matter regarding four flights in 2022 and 2023, we believe accountability for reliable air travel equally lies with the U.S. government, which operates our nation’s air traffic control system. We believe the U.S. should have the safest, most efficient, and advanced air traffic control system in the world, and we urge the incoming administration to prioritize modernizing outdated ATC technology and addressing chronic air traffic controller staffing shortages to reduce ATC delays that affect millions of air travelers each year.”
JetBlue highlighted that the company has invested “tens of millions of dollars to reduce flight delays, particularly related to ongoing air traffic control (ATC) challenges in our largest markets in the Northeast and Florida.”
This penalty reflected the Biden administration’s crackdown on unfair airline practices. The Transportation Department even has a rule that offers automatic cash refunds for passengers who experience significant delays.
Other airlines are also being investigated by the Transportation Department for similar flight delays.