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Airline passengers face longer delays under DOT rule, study finds

It takes most air passengers far more time to reach their destination despite a federal rule that penalizes airlines for stranding them onboard during lengthy tarmac delays, a Dartmouth College-Massachusetts Institute of Technology study finds.

are allowed to deplane."

Going forward, the researchers plan to examine the 's impact on commercial airlines across different years, on commercial airline schedule decision-making and separately on international carriers, regional carriers, legacy carriers and low-cost carriers.

Provided by Dartmouth College

Citation: Airline passengers face longer delays under DOT rule, study finds (2016, January 8) retrieved 14 May 2025 from /news/2016-01-airline-passengers-longer-dot.html
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