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By its sixth hour sitting on a deserted
tarmac, Continental Express Flight 2816 had taken on the smell of
diapers and an overwhelmed lone toilet.
What should have been a 2 1/2-hour trip from Houston to
Minneapolis had moved into its ninth hour, and the 47 passengers on
board had burned through the free pretzels and drinks handed out
early in their Friday night flight from Houston.
Passengers on another flight that had been diverted to the
airport in Rochester, Minn., because of storms were allowed to
disembark and were put on a bus that would take them the 85 miles
to Minneapolis. And the terminal, where passengers could at least
stretch their legs, breathe fresh air and use the vending machines,
was a mere 50 yards away.
But it wasn't until 6 a.m. Saturday - six hours after landing -
that Flight 2816's passengers were allowed out of the plane.
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"It was almost a surreal quality that kind of developed during
the night," passenger Link Christin said. "It felt like you were
trapped in a cave underground."
In the end, it took 12 hours and a new flight crew for Flight
2816 to complete its journey. There have been longer waits on
airport tarmacs in recent years - passengers on a February 2007
JetBlue flight waited 11 hours at New York's John F. Kennedy
International Airport - but the Flight 2816 delay gives the airline
industry another black eye and could give a lift to legislation
aimed at preventing such nightmare scenarios.
Continental Airlines on Monday deferred most questions to
ExpressJet Airlines, the regional carrier that operated the flight.
But Continental did issue an apology to passengers, calling it
"completely unacceptable" and offering refunds and vouchers for
future travel.
Flight 2816 left Houston at 9:23 p.m. Friday, scheduled to
arrive in Minneapolis by midnight. Instead, severe weather forced
air controllers to divert the plane south to Rochester, where it
landed after midnight.
In Minneapolis, Continental's dispatchers decided to wait out
the storms rather than cancel the flight and bus passengers the
remaining 85 miles.
Christin said a female voice shouted back asking if anyone
wanted a drink.
"And for the next five hours, there was no offer of drink or
food," said Christin, a St. Paul resident returning from visiting
his father.
The flight was cleared to take off at 2 a.m., but the storms
started up again.
The passengers remained calm, Christin said. But he described a
difficult environment where sleep was scarcely possible, with
babies crying out every 5 to 10 minutes and not enough blankets or
pillows to go around.
Adding to the frustration were periodic announcements that led
passengers to think they would soon be moving. One announcement
said a bus would soon arrive to take them to Minneapolis; an hour
later, passengers were told the bus wasn't ready.
At 5 a.m., the flight got clearance again. But by then, its crew
had worked more than the legal limit of hours. Another crew had to
be flown in.
It wasn't until 6 a.m. that ExpressJet let the passengers off
the plane to enter the terminal. And it took 2 1/2 hours for the
passengers to re-board the same plane - still with a full, smelly
toilet - to head to Minneapolis. They landed at 9:15 a.m., almost a
half-day after leaving Houston.
Kristy Nicholas, a spokeswoman for ExpressJet Airlines, said
passengers couldn't go to the Rochester terminal to wait out the
storms because they would have needed to redo their security
screening and screeners had gone home.
The airport's manager, Steven Leqve, said that wasn't true.
Leqve said passengers could have waited in a secure area until
their plane was cleared to leave.
"This is not an airport issue. This is an airline issue," he
said.
The Rochester airport took in another diverted flight, a
Northwest plane from Phoenix, just before Flight 2816 landed. The
more than 50 passengers on that plane were placed on a bus and made
it to Minneapolis by 1:30 a.m.
Leqve said the Delta manager in Rochester offered space on the
bus to Continental, which declined.
Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Commerce
Committee's aviation operations subcommittee, said the incident
underscored the need to pass legislation setting a three-hour limit
for an airplane to sit on the tarmac without passengers being
allowed off. A so-called passenger bill of rights that would do
just that recently passed the Commerce Committee and awaits action
in the full Senate.
"There needs to be some common sense used in these cases and it
seems to me these folks have a right to complain very seriously
about what happened," Dorgan said.
The Air Transport Association, which represents a group of
airlines that includes Continental, has resisted the legislation in
the past. Spokeswoman Elizabeth Merida said the group continues to
believe the legislation "will ultimately end up inconveniencing
passengers rather than helping them."
Jim Manley, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
D-Nev., said the bill would be considered by the Senate "at some
point in the fall."
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