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LOST LUGGAGE EXPERIENCE
FRUSTRATING FOR TRAVELERS
Originally published on Kron4’s website
It is one of those things
that ruins a vacation...the airline losing or misplacing your luggage.
It's a nightmare that
affects millions of airline passengers a year.
While only one-half of one
percent of luggage checked in gets lost, that still means five million unhappy
travelers with lost luggage every year.
We looked into one case and
followed it until its unexpected outcome.
For Carol Frost, it seemed
like a lost cause, but she wasn't about to give up.
"I know that luggage
doesn't disappear. It has to be somewhere," she said.
This was her fifth trip to
an airport in search of a suitcase missing more than four weeks now.
The bag contained her
favorite clothing and holiday gifts for her large family.
"And I have nothing. I have
no Christmas presents. Nobody got presents," she said.
Somewhere between SFO
and Lincoln
, Nebraska with a stop in Denver , one of her two checked-in bags went
astray.
It's something many
travelers fear.
Between the time you check
in your luggage and claim it at the destination, it will go through a maze of conveyer
belts and luggage carts."
One of Carol's baggage
claim tags provided a clue.
"And this other claim check
has someone else's name on it entirely, and the destination for this is Sydney,
Australia.," she showed us.
It seems Carol's bag went
south because of the airline's mix-up in baggage tags. The solution seemed simple
enough... send the bag back from Australia .
Instead, Carol said she
ended up on a goose chase. She made repeated trips to airports because when she called
the airline for information, she either ended up stuck on hold, talking to a computer,
disconnected, or given wrong information about where and when her suitcase would be
returned .
"I would just like an
apology and I'd like to know from a human being, that at least someone is doing
something, instead of me calling everyday and just getting this runaround. It's very
frustrating."
The airlines say out of all
the bags misplaced, they recover 98 percent of them and return them to their rightful
owners within a few hours. But for those who never get their luggage back,
that's small consolation.
Carol's unfortunate
experience was with United Airlines. But, according to the Department of
Transportation, American Eagle airlines consistently had the highest rate of mishandled
baggage complaints last year. Next was TWA, then United Airlines. Alaska Airlines had
the lowest rate of mishandled baggage reports.
Today, the hunt takes Carol
to SFO's police department's lost and found room, where bags without tags that connect
them to any airline are kept.
"There's about 200 to 250
bags that would come in here a month," said Sgt. Lawrence Ratti of the San Francisco
Police Department.
Then it was back to United
Airlines baggage office, where Carol gets an interesting piece of
information.
"They're not only going to
reimburse you for everything in your bag, but if they find your bag with all your
contents, they're going to also send that bag to you too," a United Airlines baggage
service clerk told her.
To reduce the chance of
losing your luggage..
Clearly identify your
luggage inside as well as outside.
"Have a permanent
identification inside the luggage, because the airline is going to go inside your
luggage and try to identify the rightful owner of that luggage and then they will
notify you," said SFO spokesperson Ron Wilson.
Carol had done that, but
not the next thing....
- Make sure the airline
tag on your luggage is for the correct destination before it's sent
off.
- Report a missing bag
before you leave the airport. If the bag is deemed lost, there's often a deadline to
file a claim. At United, it's 45 days.
- If your trip involved
more than one carrier, it's the final carrier that's usually responsible for
the loss.
- Know the airlines won't
reimburse you for everything. What's exempt, though, is in the fine print, which
consumers don't often read.
"If you knew that the
carriers do not cover computers, cameras, electronics, heirlooms, coins, stuff that you
need for work that are samples, almost anything except the dirty underwear, you
wouldn't be checking it," said travel attorney Alexander Anolik.
Airlines will reimburse you
up to$2500 for domestic flights.
Bottom line, if you don't
want to lose it, carry it on the plane, if you can.
Finally, to cover your
bases, check your homeowners policy or consider travel insurance for additional
coverage .
One month after her luggage
was lost, carol got a $1500 check from united to cover the loss. A day later, her bag
was found. True to the airlines's word, she got to keep both.
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