22 & 23 Jan : disruption : fog delays at LHR
#181
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The 5 hour rule is correct. But on the face of it you can claim EC261 delay compensation, assuming you are delayed more than 3 hours into LHR. This is because you appear to have asked to be transferred to an AA service, which had space, BA refused and thus "LE versus TAP" applies. Let's see how late you are into LHR however, and assuming LHR is your end point.
#182
Join Date: Mar 2022
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Im stuck in Berlin as my Wednesday flight home has been cancelled and Ive been pushed back to Thursday. I should have been here Sunday afternoon but it was nearly 23:00 before we landed. Ho hum.
I guess its knock on disruption. No sane Y alternatives back to MAN on Wed under 1k 😳
Can I accept the 24 hr delay under protest claim my hotel extension and reasonable meals? Is there a 261 claim or can BA claim they need several days to recover from a bit of fog?
I guess its knock on disruption. No sane Y alternatives back to MAN on Wed under 1k 😳
Can I accept the 24 hr delay under protest claim my hotel extension and reasonable meals? Is there a 261 claim or can BA claim they need several days to recover from a bit of fog?
#183
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#184
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If you are automatically rebooked on a BA flight but subsequently call up and rebook yourself onto to the earliest flight available (requiring transit but still arriving more than 12hrs late) - I presume you have then given up your rights to any EC delay compensation (assuming it even applies here - I'm sure BA will state that "fog" counts as a weather delay)?
#185
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#186
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If you are automatically rebooked on a BA flight but subsequently call up and rebook yourself onto to the earliest flight available (requiring transit but still arriving more than 12hrs late) - I presume you have then given up your rights to any EC delay compensation (assuming it even applies here - I'm sure BA will state that "fog" counts as a weather delay)?
#187
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The 5 hour rule is correct. But on the face of it you can claim EC261 delay compensation, assuming you are delayed more than 3 hours into LHR. This is because you appear to have asked to be transferred to an AA service, which had space, BA refused and thus "LE versus TAP" applies. Let's see how late you are into LHR however, and assuming LHR is your end point.
#188
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I doubt this is going to fly. There is no right to request to be put on an earlier OAL flight in case of a minor delay like this - just because there is a flight departing to the destination earlier than the delayed flight, it doesn't mean that there is a right to be rebooked. The fact that the OP was (rightfully) denied to rebooked to AA in this situation doesn't mean that suddenly 261 comp. is due (in a situation where it is clearly otherwise not due because at outstation incoming aircraft delayed due to weather)
#189
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I think you may be trying to stretch TAP a bit too far tbh. TAP was a 24 hour delay so there would be no possibility to reduce to under the threshold unless rebooked - which TAP refused.
In this case due to the level of the delay its not even clear they would actually be delayed sufficiently to be in scope. Also the underlying reasons are still relevant so even if delayed beyond the threshold compensation may still not be due.
In this case due to the level of the delay its not even clear they would actually be delayed sufficiently to be in scope. Also the underlying reasons are still relevant so even if delayed beyond the threshold compensation may still not be due.
#190
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In that matter the delay was almost 24hours. No sane judge is going to order payment of EU 261/04 comp. because the OP was on a 4 hour delayed BA flight from LAX and asked to be rebooked OAL.
#191
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I think you may be trying to stretch TAP a bit too far tbh. TAP was a 24 hour delay so there would be no possibility to reduce to under the threshold unless rebooked - which TAP refused.
In this case due to the level of the delay its not even clear they would actually be delayed sufficiently to be in scope. Also the underlying reasons are still relevant so even if delayed beyond the threshold compensation may still not be due.
In this case due to the level of the delay its not even clear they would actually be delayed sufficiently to be in scope. Also the underlying reasons are still relevant so even if delayed beyond the threshold compensation may still not be due.
#192
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My flight from AGP was delayed yesterday due to the fog issue.
Then after boarding someone decided to self-offload. Thanks mate.
Then our gate was occupied when we got to Heathrow.
But I got home, not too late, well looked after by an excellent crew and my goodness, what's happened to CE catering, it was so much better than before in both directions. Quite impressed.
Oh, and the food and beverage options at the lounge in AGP have also improved a lot. Who knows, maybe things are getting better again!
Back to my boat now.
Then after boarding someone decided to self-offload. Thanks mate.
Then our gate was occupied when we got to Heathrow.
But I got home, not too late, well looked after by an excellent crew and my goodness, what's happened to CE catering, it was so much better than before in both directions. Quite impressed.
Oh, and the food and beverage options at the lounge in AGP have also improved a lot. Who knows, maybe things are getting better again!
Back to my boat now.
#193
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The 5 hour rule is correct. But on the face of it you can claim EC261 delay compensation, assuming you are delayed more than 3 hours into LHR. This is because you appear to have asked to be transferred to an AA service, which had space, BA refused and thus "LE versus TAP" applies. Let's see how late you are into LHR however, and assuming LHR is your end point.
#194
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Just to highlight how important the remote de-icing facility now is to BA, over the past few days (Sun-Tuesday) nearly 75% of all BA departures have used JEDI to de-ice the airframe. In previous mass de-icing events it's been 20-30%.
#195
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Thats impressive. I remember the days before Jedi and the struggle to de-ice on stand. Without Jedi there would be a lot more disruption than weve seen recently.