You ever get the sense the airlines are lying to you?
Sure, the government shutdown
wasn’t their fault. But are they always honest — in this instance and others —
when flyers face delays?
How often has a promised 20-minute
delay morphed into an hour? And then
another hour? And maybe even a cancellation?
Because these most recent delays
were beyond their control (they can blame Congress), airlines were not required
to do much… aside from apologize. Some
did offer meal vouchers and hotel rooms, but for the most part travelers were
on their own as schedules and staff were juggled.
Overall, the federal shutdown
is estimated to have cost airlines, hotels, and car-rental companies about $1
billion a week. And that’s not even
counting the cost to travelers for their time and expenses.
But when the airlines say, “We
apologize for the delay, but it’s not our fault,” there are some things they
can and do control, especially as they drive for maximum revenue on every
flight… like paid-for seat assignments, one of the so called “junk
fees”.
A US
Senate report says one airline alone, United, raked in $1.3
billion just for letting passengers pick their seats… more than the $1.2
billion their earned for handling checked bags.
Assigned seats ease the
boarding process and give fliers what they want… aisle access, that comfy
middle seat or, my favorite, the window seat.
I want to see where I’m flying and I’ll pay to get it.
So imagine the outrage of
passengers on several airlines who paid $15 - $30 for a window seat and found it
had no window!
A Window Seat with NO Window?
United and Delta airlines are
now facing a class
action suit potentially affecting more than a million
passengers who were affected, paying for window seats with no windows. It’s just the way the aircraft were built and
the seats were laid out, so the airlines knew before offering those seat
reservations.
If they knew the ‘window
seats’ had no windows, why not warn passengers before they click?
(I encountered the same
problem on Amtrak on its new NextGen Acela, choosing a window seat in advance
only to board the new train and find a bulkhead and no window.)
What’s the airline’s
defense? Well, they say that just
because it’s called a window seat doesn’t mean you get a window… that the seat
name refers more to its placement nearest the fuselage vs the aisle.
In its defense, United’s
attorneys literally said “The use of the word
‘window’ in reference to a particular seat cannot reasonably be interpreted as
a promise that the seat will have an exterior window view.”
Really. That’s what they said.
All of which reminds me of
former bosses at Metro-North in the bad old pre-COVID days of over-crowded,
standing-room-only trains. When one
passenger suggested a refund for not getting a seat he was told, “You’re paying
for transportation. We never promised
you a seat.”
Such customer service!
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