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U.S. aviation regulators fined Fort Worth-based American Airlines $4.1 million for violating federal laws by leaving passengers on the tarmac too long, with most of the three-hour-plus delays ...
The Transportation Department slapped American Airlines with a $4.1 million fine in connection to how long the carrier has made passengers wait on planes idling on the tarmac.
The federal government fined American Airlines $4.1 million for dozens of instances in which passengers were kept on board planes without a chance to exit during long ground delays.
DOT levies largest-ever penalty against American Airlines for tarmac delays. The Texas-based airline was issued a $4 million fine for violating rules about keeping passengers on planes during ...
The Department of Transportation is fining American Airlines $4.1 million for keeping passengers on delayed planes on the tarmac for longer than legally allowed.. DOT regulations require airlines ...
The Department of Transportation said Monday it had fined American Airlines more than $4 million for keeping passengers on the tarmac during long delays. The fine was handed down for dozens of inst… ...
The U.S. Department of Transportation said Monday it fined American $4.1 million for more than three dozen violations of the so-called tarmac-delay rules, which took effect about a decade ago.
The United States Transportation Department (USDOT) on Monday fined American Airlines $4.1 million for unlawfully keeping thousands of passengers on the tarmac for hours, the largest-ever penalty ...
An American Airlines employee died Thursday during a tarmac incident police are calling an accident at the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport in Texas. Around 2 p.m., the Austin Police ...
American Airlines owes $4.1 million for tarmac delays that trapped passengers on planes, the largest such fine against an airline since rules covering delays took effect about a decade ago.
American Airlines faces a $4.1 million penalty for violating federal statutes that prohibit tarmac delays of three or more hours without offering passengers a chance to deplane.