Baggage Allowance Fact Sheet
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  1. #1

    Exclamation Baggage Allowance Fact Sheet

    Baggage Allowance Fact Sheet

    Many airlines are charging additional fees for checked baggage. This fact sheet is specific to those carriers under the City Program contract. It is intended to provide information and protect travelers under the contracted fares. Unless otherwise specified, new airline checked bag policy applies to travel commencing May 5, 2008. The fact sheet shows the fee charged or if an exception is allowed by the carriers. As of May 28, 2008, the following is the most up-to-date list of airlines that have instituted a fee for a checked bag.

    Military personnel traveling on official orders will not have to pay new fees for checked baggage in most instances, although the airlines are not exempting other government employees on official business from the fees, according to information provided by provided by the General Services Administration.

    http://www.gsa.gov/Portal/gsa/ep/con...Type=GSA_BASIC


  2. #2
    Military orders trump new airline baggage fees
    By Jennifer H. Svan, Stars and Stripes
    Pacific edition, Sunday, June 22, 2008



    U.S. military personnel and Defense Department employees won’t have to pay new fees for checked baggage as long as they’re traveling on official government orders in most instances, according to military officials.

    The fee exemption applies to permanent-change-of-station and temporary-duty travel, according to Staff Sgt. Erica Hix, Transportation Management Office passenger travel specialist at Yokota Air Base, Japan.

    "As long as you have a set of orders and present it at the counter, they’ll waive the baggage charges," she said.

    Several U.S. carriers charge or will soon charge a fee for checked bags.

    This month, American and United airlines began charging domestic travelers $15 for the first piece of checked luggage and $25 for the second, each way. US Airways will begin collecting $15 for the first checked bag starting July 9. The airline, according to its Web site, already charges $25 for a second checked bag and $100 for a third. The new fees apply to all flights to and from Canada, Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as flights within the United States.

    The airlines will waive the baggage fee for flights that are booked using government contract fares, Hix said, noting that applies to nearly all official travel.

    People traveling on emergency leave orders also should be able to get the checked baggage fees waived, said Staff Sgt. Hon Mac, TMO passenger travel supervisor at Misawa Air Base, Japan.

    Family members also don’t have to pay the fee, whether they travel with the servicemember or separately, as long as their names are listed on the PCS orders, Hix said.

    A few airlines don’t offer any baggage fee waivers. JetBlue and Midwest do not exempt any government travelers from their $20 fee for the second checked bag, according to information from the General Services Administration.

    Mac advised passengers to check airline Web sites for information about baggage fees. Airlines also are charging for excess luggage weight. The government will reimburse those fees only if reimbursement is specified on one’s official orders.

    Active-duty servicemembers and government employees must pay the checked baggage fee for commercial air travel while on leave.

    Some airlines cite rising fuel costs for implementing the new baggage fees.

    American, for example, expects to increase revenue by more than $350 million annually with the fee, according to the Wall Street Journal, but also expects to pay $2.6 billion more for fuel this year than in 2007.

    Ellie


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