In the first penalty of its kind, federal transportation
officials docked Asiana Airlines $500,000 for failing to promptly contact
passengers' families and keep them informed about their loved ones after a deadly
crash last year at San Francisco International airport.
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the U.S. Department of Transportation said it took the South Korean airline five days to contact the families of all 291 passengers. In addition, a required crash hotline was initially routed to an automated reservations line. Never before has the department concluded that an airline broke U.S. laws requiring prompt and generous assistance to the loved ones of crash victims.
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the U.S. Department of Transportation said it took the South Korean airline five days to contact the families of all 291 passengers. In addition, a required crash hotline was initially routed to an automated reservations line. Never before has the department concluded that an airline broke U.S. laws requiring prompt and generous assistance to the loved ones of crash victims.
Three people died and dozens were injured on July 6 when
Asiana Flight 214 clipped a seawall while landing. One of the victims, a
16-year-old girl, apparently survived being ejected onto the ground, only to be
run over by a fire truck in the post-crash confusion. Many of the families live
in South Korea or China, meaning the airline was their main source of
information on the crash half a world away. "The last thing families and
passengers should have to worry about at such a stressful time is how to get
information from their carrier," U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony
Foxx said in a prepared statement. Under a consent order the airline signed
with the department, Asiana will pay a $400,000 fine and get a $100,000 credit
for sponsoring industry-wide conferences and training sessions through 2015 to
discuss lessons learned from the situation.
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