Amsterdam’s Schiphol compensating air travellers hit by chaos at European hub

Travelers wait in long lines to check in and board flights at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, Netherlands, on June 21, 2022.  - AP PIC
Travelers wait in long lines to check in and board flights at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport, Netherlands

THE HAGUE, Aug 15 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport has launched a compensation programme for travellers who missed their flights because of lengthy delays that have plagued the busy European hub for months.

Schiphol’s announcement heads off a possible mass claim for compensation by passengers who saw their holiday plans evaporate amid hours-long queues for security screening.

The Dutch airport was one of several across Europe, including London’s Heathrow, that was plunged into chaos by staff shortages and soaring demand as air travel rebounded strongly from two years of Covid-19 restrictions.

Airlines and airports slashed jobs during the pandemic, making it difficult to quickly ramp back up to serve the new burst of travellers.

“A lot of people have really been looking forward to their holidays abroad, especially after two years of Covid. We’re extremely sorry that some people have missed their flights due to the long security control queue,” Schiphol chief executive officer Dick Benschop said in a statement.

“During these special times and circumstances, we must not let these people fall through the cracks.”

The compensation programme is for people booked to fly from April 23 to Aug 11 who arrived at Schiphol on time but missed their flight because they were stuck in a queue. It covers costs, including rebooking a flight or booking a replacement flight, extra travel costs and accommodation, transport and activities booked at the travellers’ destination.

Schiphol did not say how much the compensation programme would cost the airport.

The Dutch Consumers’ Association welcomed the plan.

“We investigated the possibility of a mass claim and then entered into discussions with Schiphol. Our joint efforts have resulted in this arrangement, which has helped a large group of consumers,” association director Sandra Molenaar said in a statement on Schiphol’s website.

Heathrow said on Thursday that its cap on the daily number of departing passengers has eased the travel crunch at Britain’s largest airport. It apologised last month to passengers whose travels were disrupted by staff shortages. — NNN-AGENCIES

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