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- Jan 17, 2019
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There have been several threads recently where passengers have posted that Amtrak has canceled their sleeping car reservations and re-booked them into coach due to equipment changes, etc. I thought the adequacy of Amtrak's compensation in these instances deserved its own topic but if the moderators don't agree they can move this elsewhere.
It seems to me that when Amtrak cancels a reservation due to a change in equipment it is akin in many aspects to an airline overbooking a flight and bumping passengers either by asking for volunteers or by bumping passengers involuntarily as a last resort. I understand that this is controlled by government regulations. It used to be that passengers who were bumped received a one-way free ticket as compensation which could be used anywhere that airline flew in the continental U.S. In more recent years, I think the airlines used a bidding process to offer some cash or a voucher to entice volunteers when a flight was overbooked. I don't travel by plane often so I don't profess to be an expert in this but my wife who regularly travels by plane has received a number of free tickets over the years by being bumped. And when you are bumped you still have your original ticket so you can re-book your flight for later that day or a different day.
So why doesn't this happen when Amtrak cancels your sleeping car reservation and puts you in coach? It is certainly not the passenger's fault. All you get normally is a voucher for the price difference between your sleeping car accommodation and the coach seat, and perhaps maybe a small additional pittance for your inconvenience and human suffering.
Instead it seems to me that if your sleeping car accommodation is canceled by Amtrak, you should be entitled to a full refund and entitled to be re-booked with your original sleeping car accommodations at a later date at no charge. If you consent to be downgraded to coach, you should be entitled to a full refund and entitled to receive a second coach ticket valid between any two Amtrak stations.
These instances are not the fault of the passenger and Amtrak should be the one to pay. Has RPA ever suggested this or are they too timid?
It seems to me that when Amtrak cancels a reservation due to a change in equipment it is akin in many aspects to an airline overbooking a flight and bumping passengers either by asking for volunteers or by bumping passengers involuntarily as a last resort. I understand that this is controlled by government regulations. It used to be that passengers who were bumped received a one-way free ticket as compensation which could be used anywhere that airline flew in the continental U.S. In more recent years, I think the airlines used a bidding process to offer some cash or a voucher to entice volunteers when a flight was overbooked. I don't travel by plane often so I don't profess to be an expert in this but my wife who regularly travels by plane has received a number of free tickets over the years by being bumped. And when you are bumped you still have your original ticket so you can re-book your flight for later that day or a different day.
So why doesn't this happen when Amtrak cancels your sleeping car reservation and puts you in coach? It is certainly not the passenger's fault. All you get normally is a voucher for the price difference between your sleeping car accommodation and the coach seat, and perhaps maybe a small additional pittance for your inconvenience and human suffering.
Instead it seems to me that if your sleeping car accommodation is canceled by Amtrak, you should be entitled to a full refund and entitled to be re-booked with your original sleeping car accommodations at a later date at no charge. If you consent to be downgraded to coach, you should be entitled to a full refund and entitled to receive a second coach ticket valid between any two Amtrak stations.
These instances are not the fault of the passenger and Amtrak should be the one to pay. Has RPA ever suggested this or are they too timid?