I live in the UK, when I was still back and forth to visit my now wife, one thing we noticed is you can save $100-$300 by using a VPN and booking everything from outside Canada. This is more evident when booking with Air Canada, but always worth popping on a VPN and looking at what the price differences are.
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I've heard about this before, this is unbelivebly uncompetitive! Sounds like something the Consumer Affairs should look at.
Loads of companies across all industries do it. Not that that makes it right, just that it's pretty pervasive.
Story time?
I work up north where itโs cold as fuck, company flys me in and out. On one travel day heading home somebody at air Canada forgot to plug the plane in after itโs final flight from the day before. I guess with what was drawing power and the frigid temperatures the battery(s) were no longer good to go for my flight. So their plan was to send a mechanic up from Vancouver with new battery(s) and get us in our way. They got halfway to us and realized they didnโt put the replacement battery(s) on the flight. So they had to turn around and get them and come back up. This caused me to miss my connection and the next one they could get me on was the next day. I submitted a claim since everything was 100% within their control. They denied it. So I replied to them with everything that happened, and told them to pay up or I was submitting a a claim with the CTA. They sent me a direct deposit for $1000 and and apology.
I'm pretty sure they deny every claim the first time. A lot of people won't make a fuss and it saves them a lot of money. If you follow up, only then will they actually look at your claim.
We should really amend the law to be "and if they incorrectly deny a claim they have to pay 10 times more". Enough to make it cost more than it's worth if they do it intentionally, not enough to bankrupt them...
Air Canada will make up some bullshit reason to not give you compensation.
Pilot couldn't make it there? It was a "maintenance issue".