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Backlog of air passenger complaints still rising but may be peaking, enforcement agency says

The backlog of complaints to the Canadian Transportation Agency related to delayed or cancelled flights or lost luggage has ballooned to more than 30,000 up from 18,000 this summer but the number may have peaked.

Canadian Transportation Agency has seen a spike in the number of complaints following a hectic summer

As pandemic border restrictions started to ease, air passengers experienced longer-than-usual delays, cancelled flights and longer processing times. (Laura Clementson/CBC)

The backlog of complaints to the Canadian Transportation Agency related to delayed or cancelled flights or lost luggage has ballooned to more than 30,000 up from 18,000 this summer but the number may have peaked.

The Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) a quasi-judicial tribunal and regulator tasked with settling disputes between airlines and customers has been dealing with a massive numberof air passenger complaints since new regulations came into forcein 2019 that require an airline to compensate passengers when a flight is delayed or cancelled for a reason that is within the airline's control.

The number of complaints began to spike earlier this year as a hectic summer travel season driven in partby a rise in air travel following the pandemic slump resulted in an increasing number of customers claiming airlines were skirting federal compensation rules.

Michelle Greenshields, head of the dispute resolution branch at the CTA, told a committee of MPs on Monday that the number of complaints may have peaked.

"We've witnessed a big jump in complaints which has only recently started to slow down," Greenshilds told the House of Commons transport committee.

Last week, the CTA told CBCNews that the agency has received more than 19,000 complaints since April. That's over 7,000 more than the roughly 12,000 complaints the agency received in all of last year.

Speaking at a press conference on Monday, Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said some air passengers had to deal with "unacceptable situations" during the summer. He saidthe government is working with the CTA to address the "unprecedented" backlog.

"I will acknowledge that this is a lot more than any of us had ever seen before," he said.

Transport Minister Omar Alghabra rises during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in Ottawa on Dec. 16, 2021. (Patrick Doyle/The Canadian Press)

The government has allocated funding to the CTA in recent years including $11 million in April's budget to address the backlog.

But Alghabra said the government needs to startlooking beyond throwingmoney at the problem.

"We're looking at not only what other resources [we can provide] but are there processes that we can streamline to make it more efficient so it takes less time," he said.

Greenshields told the transport committee it can take up to 18 months to process a complaint. She saidCTAcontinually looks for ways to process complaints more quickly such as "batching" complaints from the same flightto resolve multiple issues at once.

The committee, which isstudying ways to improveprotections forair passengers, also heard from Jeff Morrison, president of the National Airlines Council of Canada.

Morrison argued that accountability in the air travel industry should be shared so that responsibility isn't laid entirelyon airlines.

"Airlines don't operate in isolation," Morrison told the committee, adding air carriersrely on airports and navigation service providers to ensure passengers arrive on time.

Morrison said any improvements to air passenger protections should focus on improvingservice standards across the industry.