TORONTO - Delta Air Lines is offering US$30,000 (£23,792) to each person on board a plane that crash-landed in Toronto last Monday - all of whom survived. As it landed in the Canadian city, ...

the plane skidded along the runway in flames, before flipping over and coming to a halt upside down. Passengers described their amazement, as most of them walked away without injuries. It remains unclear what caused the incident, which is under investigation. There were 76 passengers and four crew on the flight, which had travelled from the US city of Minneapolis before making its crash-landing in Canada.
A spokesperson for Delta said the money offer had no strings attached and did not affect customers' rights. Toronto law firm Rochon Genova says it has been retained by certain passengers and their families over the crash-landing. Lawyer Vincent Genova said the group expected a "timely and fair resolution", highlighting that his clients "suffered personal injuries of a serious nature that required hospital attention". In an email to the BBC, Mr Genova said the $30,000 compensation is an "advance" payment meant to assist plane crash victims with short-term financial challenges, and the airline will seek to deduct it from any later settled claims. There is precedent to these types of payments, like in 2013, when Asiana Airlines offered passengers of a San Francisco plane crash $10,000 in initial compensation.