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The Canadian Transportation Agency has ordered Porter Airlines to pay cash to passengers bumped from domestic flights.

The regulator has given the carrier, which operates turboprops primarily from Toronto City Centre Airport, until July 8 to detail the actual compensation.

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Porter currently doesn’t have a compensation policy for passengers bumped due to overbooking from flights within Canada, but has provided a $500 voucher for future travel as a “goodwill gesture.”

Responding to a complaint from air passenger rights activist Gabor Lukacs, the agency found Porter’s current policy was “unreasonable.”

It also ordered the airline to either rebook passengers on Porter or other airlines or provide a free flight back to the point of origin if the bumped passengers no longer wants to continue their travel.

The CTA previously ordered Porter to compensate bumped passengers travelling from Canada to the United States. In that case, Porter must pay twice the total one-way fare or up to $650 if passengers arrive at their destination one to four hours later than scheduled, and four times the fare or up to $1,300 if they’re more than four hours late.

WestJet Airlines also follows this compensation model for bumping passengers from flights between Canada and the United States. On domestic flights, the Calgary-based carrier pays the lower amount for delays between one and two hours, and up to $1,300 for delays of more than two hours.

Air Canada was previously ordered to pay cash compensation to bumped passengers on domestic flights. It pays between $200 to $800 in cash, depending on the length of the delay, for flights within Canada and from Canada to the U.S. It pays up to $650 and $1,300 for delays involving flights from the U.S. to Canada.