US: American, Delta to revive deal to fly stranded passengers
American Airlines and Delta said Wednesday they entered into an agreement to accommodate stranded passengers during events such as winter storms and hurricanes, in a partial revival of an earlier interline deal between the two rivals. The agreement is meant to reduce the number of passengers stuck in airports because the original carrier was unable to rebook them on a flight of its own. "It's a tool that will give our employees more options to reacommodate customers whose Delta flights are canceled during weather and other uncommon scenarios," Delta spokesman Morgan Durrant said. American Airlines spokesman Matt Miller said the carrier was happy to put the deal in place after Delta reached out several months ago to discuss the return of such an agreement between the two parties. Neither Delta nor American detailed the financial specifics of the agreement. Prior to its dissolution in September 2015, the two largest US airlines by passenger traffic had a far more comprehensive interline agreement, which among other things allowed for booked travel to include segments operated individually by both Delta and American on the same ticket. <br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/imagelibrary/news/hot-topics/2018-01-25/general/us-american-delta-to-revive-deal-to-fly-stranded-passengers
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US: American, Delta to revive deal to fly stranded passengers
American Airlines and Delta said Wednesday they entered into an agreement to accommodate stranded passengers during events such as winter storms and hurricanes, in a partial revival of an earlier interline deal between the two rivals. The agreement is meant to reduce the number of passengers stuck in airports because the original carrier was unable to rebook them on a flight of its own. "It's a tool that will give our employees more options to reacommodate customers whose Delta flights are canceled during weather and other uncommon scenarios," Delta spokesman Morgan Durrant said. American Airlines spokesman Matt Miller said the carrier was happy to put the deal in place after Delta reached out several months ago to discuss the return of such an agreement between the two parties. Neither Delta nor American detailed the financial specifics of the agreement. Prior to its dissolution in September 2015, the two largest US airlines by passenger traffic had a far more comprehensive interline agreement, which among other things allowed for booked travel to include segments operated individually by both Delta and American on the same ticket. <br/>