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Transportation secretary to review airline policies

rnrnWASHINGTON (AP) : The decision by JetBlue and American Airlines to leave passengers stranded aboard planes for several hours this winter during storms has led the Transportation Department’s top official to call for an investigation.rnrnANALYSIS: How to solve the airlines passenger service woesrnrnI have serious concerns about airlines contingency planning that allows passengers to sit on the tarmac for hours on end, Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said Tuesday in a statement. It is imperative that airlines do everything possible to ensure that situations like these do not occur again.rnrnJenny Dervin, a spokeswoman for the Forest Hills based JetBlue Airways, said early Wednesday that the company would cooperate fully with the investigation.rnrnJetBlue has been very open and forthcoming regarding our operations during and following the Valentines Day ice storm in New York, she said.rnrnA call to American Airlines early Wednesday was not immediately returned.rnrnPeters asked Calvin Scovel, the Department of Transportations inspector general, to examine why JetBlue passengers were stranded aboard a plane at New Yorks John F. Kennedy International Airport during the recent Valentines Day storm, which caused the airline to cancel about 1,000 flights and sparked a massive corporate mea culpa campaign.rnrnShe also asked Scovel to examine a December incident in which American Airlines passengers were forced to stay on a plane for more than six hours.rnrnPeters said the investigation would look into airlines polices on extended delays and make recommendations for how to prevent such events.rnrnPassengers have a right to know what to expect when it comes to ground delays,she said.rnrnScovel said in a statement that his invesigation would provide a thorough and objective assessment so that corrective actions can be taken by the appropriate parties to prevent such situations from happening again.rnrnJetBlue has been on the defensive after stranding passengers in planes at JFK for up to 10 1/2 hours earlier this month. The airline adopted a customer bill of rights after the disruptions, and has been scrambling to restore its reputation with passengers.rnrnLast week, the Air Transport Association, which represents most major passenger and cargo carriers, said the Federal Aviation Administration should allow delayed flights to come back to terminals so passengers can exit planes without forcing those planes to lose their place in line for takeoff.rnrnrnrnrn

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