Qantas agrees to pay $74m over Covid-19 travel voucher refunds

The case relates to cancelled flights during the pandemic, for which customers were given credits instead of cash.

BBC News - Asia
75
2 min read
0 views
Qantas agrees to pay $74m over Covid-19 travel voucher refunds

8 hours ago

Osmond ChiaBusiness reporter

Getty Images A Qantas Airways Airbus A380 descends at Los Angeles International Airport, with the city in the backgroundGetty Images

Qantas Airways has agreed to pay A$105m (£55m; $74m) over claims that it should have issued cash refunds for cancelled flights during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The class action lawsuit was made on behalf of passengers whose flights were cancelled by the carrier between 2020 and 2022 and received travel credits instead of cash.

The settlement is almost double the amount that Qantas had expected to pay, according to its results published in February.

The national flag carrier said on Friday that it has agreed to pay the sum "with no admission of liability".

The settlement is subject to court approval and details of how customers can claim refunds will be made soon, said Echo Law, the legal firm leading the class action.

The firm had alleged that Qantas breached its contracts with customers by failing to provide cash refunds for cancelled flights in a timely manner, and instead offered travel credits.

The airline engaged in "misleading or deceptive conduct" over the rights of customers over their cancelled flights in violation of Australian law, Echo Law said.

By doing so, Qantas "unlawfully benefited from customers by holding for years a very significant amount of customer funds that ought to have been refunded," it added.

Qantas said in its statement that in 2023 that it had removed the expiry date on flight credits issued during the pandemic so that customers could request a cash refund right away.

The airline told investors in its half-year report that it expected to pay A$55m to settle the case.

Echo Law is leading a similar class action lawsuit against Australian budget carrier, Jetstar, over allegedly issuing customers travel credits that were worth less than the refunds that customers were entitled to.

"By acting in this way, Jetstar has enjoyed significant financial benefits at its customers' expense," said Echo Law.

BBC News understands that Jetstar is continuing defend the case.

The penalty was the largest ever imposed by an Australian court for violations of industrial relations laws.

At the rime, Qantas said it had agreed to pay the fine and that the ruling holds it accountable for actions that caused "real harm" to its employees.

"We sincerely apologise to each and every one of the 1,820 ground handling employees and to their families who suffered as a result," Qantas Group chief executive Vanessa Hudson said.

Original Source

BBC News - Asia

Share this article

Related Articles

🇨🇳
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
The Diplomat

Trump’s China Trip: 3 Possible Deliverables

The United States and China need to lower expectations about Trump’s trip and focus on delivering a few concrete outcomes.

il y a environ 8 heures1 min
🇨🇳
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
The Diplomat

China’s New Five-Year Plan Prioritizes Robotics. The World Should Pay Attention.

Beijing is embarking on a "whole-of-nation push" to achieve permanent dominance in physical AI technologies.

il y a environ 9 heures1 min
What’s important about Antelope Reef in the South China Sea’s Paracel Islands?
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

What’s important about Antelope Reef in the South China Sea’s Paracel Islands?

In January, the US-based magazine Newsweek reported that China had started dredging sand on an obscure feature in the Paracel Islands, the archipelago known as Xisha by the Chinese and Hoang Sa in Vietnam. More recent satellite images suggest that China has significantly expanded its reclamation, wi

il y a environ 22 heures2 min
Apple reduces App Store commissions in China in move applauded by Tencent, NetEase
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Apple reduces App Store commissions in China in move applauded by Tencent, NetEase

Apple announced a reduction in the App Store commissions it charges developers in China ahead of the annual World Consumer Rights Day, drawing approval from the country’s biggest gaming companies Tencent Holdings and NetEase. The US tech company said it would reduce the commission for standard in-ap

il y a environ 23 heures1 min