
If Air Canada cancels your flight, don't accept a refund, passenger rights expert says
Adrian Ghobrial reports on what is legally required from Air Canada when it comes to handling cancelled flights if a strike is called.
CTV National News: Here's what passengers should know if their flight is cancelled
One passenger rights expert says if your Air Canada flight has been cancelled, don't accept a refund.
'A refund can be one way for an airline to wash their hands of their obligation to rebook you on another flight,' said Gabor Lukacs, president of Air Passenger Rights.
Air Canada has begun cancelling flights ahead of a planned strike by roughly 10,000 flight attendants this weekend.
If you already have a ticket booked and paid for with Air Canada, then the Lukacs says that the Canadian Transportation Agency's regulations are clear: Air Canada is supposed to foot the bill for a new ticket on another airline.
In the event of a strike, which is classified as outside of an airlines control, large airlines such as Air Canada are still required to book customers a new 'reservation for the next available flight that is operated by any carrier,' according to Canada's Air Passenger Protection Regulations.
'Any carrier means any airline, including, but not limited to, the airlines competitors' said Lucas, who adds that the airline must put you on the next available flight towards your final destination, no matter the cost.
'Customers whose flights are cancelled will be notified and they will be eligible for a full refund,' Air Canada said this week in a press release on their website.
Air Canada's offer of a reimbursement could leave customers out of pocket hundreds, or even thousands of dollars. Lukacs believes the airline is trying to avoid having to rebook customers on a pricier flight with a competitor.
Ticket prices heading into the weekend have been steadily climbing. The cheapest roundtrip ticket departing Toronto on Aug. 15 and returning from Vancouver on Aug. 22 is being offered by Flair Airlines for roughly $1,300.
The same roundtrip ticket leaving Toronto on Sept. 5 and returning from Vancouver on Sept. 12 is going for as little as $273.
It all comes down to supply and demand, which in turn influences strategic pricing by airlines.
'What we are seeing is the combined effect of last-minute ticket prices, which always seem to be higher, and a sudden, substantial increase in demand,' he said. do to the pending strike action at Air Canada' says Lukacs.
The consumer advocate goes on to share that if your flight has been cancelled, and Air Canada is trying to rebook you on an Air Canada Jazz flight next Friday, but there's a more expensive WestJet flight that gets you home two days earlier, then the airline is duty bound to book you on the WestJet flight.
Lukacs, who has represented air passenger rights for more than a decade in Canada, says that if the airline refuses, a customer can go and buy a ticket from a competing airline and then send the bill to Air Canada.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
24 minutes ago
- CTV News
Lilly signs US$1.3 billion deal with Superluminal to discover obesity medicines using AI
A sign for Eli Lilly & Co. stands outside their corporate headquarters in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File) Eli Lilly has signed a deal worth US$1.3 billion with privately held Superluminal Medicines to discover and develop small-molecule drugs through AI to treat obesity and other cardiometabolic diseases. Lilly currently dominates the obesity treatment market, estimated to be worth $150 billion by the next decade, and is trying to strengthen its foothold in the space through the development of next-generation drugs, acquisitions and partnerships. The deal gives Lilly exclusive rights to develop and commercialize drug candidates discovered using Superluminal's proprietary AI-driven platform targeting G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) - a class of proteins that can influence physiological processes including metabolism, cell growth and immune responses - the drug developer said on Thursday. Drugmakers including Danish rival Novo Nordisk are exploring potential GPCR targets to develop oral small-molecule drugs for obesity. 'GPCRs have established themselves as very important targets in the obesity and cardiometabolic landscape, but we're at the very early stages of exploration of the target class,' Superluminal CEO Cony D'Cruz told Reuters. Novo struck a $2.2 billion deal with U.S. biotech Septerna in May to develop small-molecule therapies directed at select GPCR targets. Lilly has been capitalizing on the overwhelming popularity of the GLP-1 class of medicines, including its blockbuster drug Zepbound as well as Novo's Wegovy. It is also developing a keenly watched oral GLP-1 drug, orforglipron, which has failed to meet investor expectations. The drugmaker teamed up with Hong Kong-listed biotech Laekna last year to develop an experimental obesity drug that aims to help patients lose weight while preserving muscle. As part of the deal, Superluminal is eligible to receive upfront and milestone payments, an equity investment as well as tiered royalties on net sales, the company said. Boston-based startup Superluminal is developing a wholly owned lead candidate targeting a protein called melanocortin 4 receptor to treat certain rare, genetic forms of obesity and is expected to begin human trials by fourth quarter next year. The lead candidate is not part of the deal with Lilly. Superluminal is backed by investors including RA Capital Management, Insight Partners and NVentures, NVIDIA's venture capital arm. (Reporting by Mariam Sunny in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai)


CTV News
24 minutes ago
- CTV News
Business groups alarmed about potential Air Canada shutdown
Air Canada flight attendants hold a silent protest at Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport in Montreal on Monday, Aug. 11, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi TORONTO — Business groups are warning of the broader impacts a shutdown at Air Canada would bring as a Saturday work stoppage over a new contract looms. Toronto Region Board of Trade chief executive Giles Gherson says even a brief shutdown would have wide-reaching economic consequences. He says a disruptive work stoppage would come as Canada is working to reboot the economy amid mounting trade pressures, making the stakes higher than ever. The Canadian Federation of Independent Business says small businesses are deeply concerned by the prospects given the massive economic uncertainty. It says one-third of Canadian small businesses depend on the summer tourism season for their revenues and members 'cannot afford to lose a single day.' More than 10,000 flight attendants are poised to walk off the job around 1 a.m. ET on Saturday, followed by a company-imposed lockout if the two sides can't reach an eleventh-hour deal. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 15, 2025. Ian Bickis, The Canadian Press


Globe and Mail
24 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
MGE Energy Increases Dividend for 50th Consecutive Year
The board of directors of MGE Energy, Inc. (Nasdaq: MGEE), today increased the regular quarterly dividend rate 5.6% to $0.4750 per share on the outstanding shares of the company's common stock. The dividend is payable Sept. 15, 2025, to shareholders of record Sept. 1, 2025. This raises the annualized dividend rate by 10 cents from $1.80 per share to $1.90 per share. "Today's action by our board marks a milestone that only a select number of companies have achieved of increasing the dividend for 50 consecutive years, reinforcing our commitment to consistent and sustainable dividend growth and signaling the continued strength of MGE Energy's long-term business strategy for building your community energy company for the future," said Chairman, President and CEO Jeff Keebler. "MGE Energy continues to focus on our mission to provide safe, reliable, affordable and sustainable energy and on our disciplined financial management to provide ongoing value to our customers and shareholders." MGE Energy has paid cash dividends for more than 110 years. About MGE Energy MGE Energy is a public utility holding company. Its principal subsidiary, Madison Gas and Electric (MGE), generates and distributes electricity to 167,000 customers in Dane County, Wis., and purchases and distributes natural gas to 178,000 customers in seven south-central and western Wisconsin counties. MGE's roots in the Madison area date back more than 150 years.