Bill Greenwood wrote:
United Express( Mesa?) was flying to Aspen; an elderly man needed to use the bathroom,he could have been in an out in a moment,but the stew stood in front of the bathroom door to block it. He finally had to pee in a bottle while his wife held a blanket over him. Did the airline apologize, pay for his ticket, and fire the aisle Nazi? Of course not. Let's say you reserve a hotel room well in advance, perhaps it was Superbowl or you had a major business event; and you pay in advance and get a confirmed reservation. If you arrive and the hotel does not have your room because they sold it to more than one party, you would have a case not only for a refund but perhaps damages. Most important the hotel does not have the right to lock the doors and claim you can't leave for 9 hours. I am not talking about a delay of a couple of hours, I am talking about holding people hostage, including elderly and infants for 9 hours in a metal tube. Paul, I don't primarily blame the pilots. I am also a stockhoder in Southwest; I came close to buying American and Continental last year when they were down, wish I had. But what Jetblue did and their attitude in doing it stinks. Most airlines have an excellent safety record, and sometimes fares are very cheap, but the lesser airlines, even United have sometimes forgotten customer service and common decency; at worst they regard a passenger more as an opponent than a customer.
Bill,
Neither passengers nor airline employees should be allowed to get away with rude, abusive behavior including keeping pax for none hours on the tarmac. I've got tons of firsthand experience with rudeness on both sides. I could cite the bank VP that crapped on the galley cart when he didn't get his way or the dozens of belligerent drunk "Clark Griswold-like" vacationers wanting their rear ends kissed ala first class when they bought the cheapest internet coach ticket. Airlines are allowed by the DOT to oversell available seats by approx 10% because that's the average passenger "no-show" rate. Barring extreme/extenuating emergencies, what's fair to the airline when a passenger doesn't show for their flight? If they simply overslept, do they have a "right" to be booked on a later flight any more than a hotel guest should still get their room when they show a day late? Doesn't matter, because in most cases they are. Are weather and ATC delays the airlines' fault? Clearly the airlines can/should behave better (so should passengers), but much of the air travel environment such as weather, ATC and flight slot allocation is out of the control of the airlines. In the marketplace, no carrier wants to cede flight slots the competition in order to be a good corporate citizen and reduce air traffic congestion...quite the contrary, they're going to behave competitively to maximize revenue. Like I said before, airlines need to have processes, training and personnel in place to deal with irregular ops like winter storms. If I'm stranded on the taxiway, I'm gonna go back to the gate after three or four hours max (unless food/water, lav capacity runs out sooner) and if they don't give me a gate, I'm going to cite passenger health/safety (no FAA inspector would disagree!)
take a gate and worry about being called on the carpet later (happened plenty in my USAF career so why stop now...). Captains need to consider info/updates, direction from their ops control center, ramp control, local airport ops, but there comes a time when they may have to go against the company's wishes and make the tough judgement call. A lot of the passengers might not even like returning to the gate after four hours, and the company might be p*ssed, but
the captain is in command of that aircraft and responsible for it and the welfare of the people inside, not some dispatcher sitting in front of a computer screen 1000 miles away. I understand the frustration of the travelling public and some of this can be fixed, but a lot of it can't/won't be 'til policy is changed from D.C.