[respectfully snipped by me]
I wonder if this incident here will be the tipping point for us where we demand to be treated humanely regardless of the expense that would cause to corporate airline profits.
RSBM
I sure hope so, but I have my doubts. My family depends on plane travel for a good part (it's just not feasible to cross the Atlantic on any kind of ship every time) and I'm so fed up with it. My anxiety about safety is already greatly exacerbated by all the crap you get put through at airports and on board these days. They really could add a couple of notches of humane treatment.
We had our own situation with United two years ago when my then 16 year old was traveling by herself. Due to weather her plane was diverted and they ended up stuck at an unplanned airport for the night.
She went up to the desk and politely asked for assistance on what to do. The clerk barely looked at her and told her she could get herself a hotel room or sleep somewhere in the airport in a seat. She asked if they could assist her in getting a room and the clerk was very rude and told her she was on her own.
Now in tears, she called me on her cell phone and explained what was going on. She went back in line and when it was her turn again I had her hand over the phone to the clerk. I asked him how he thought a 16 year old was going to rent a hotel room and if he felt comfortable being the one to be responsible for a minor spending the night 'somewhere' in an airport.
He immediately backtracked and said he didn't know she was a minor (he knew, she told him her age) and contacted someone who took her to a special room for minors. Once there, she was fine. She slept on a couch in a supervised, closed off and mostly hidden room, was given food and drink, and was awakened by the people there in time for her flight in the morning.
Probably not the most horrific experience, but I was appalled by the behavior of the United clerk (or whatever the official function was).
A year later, the same darn thing happened and she ended up stuck overnight again. But this time she was flying a different airline (and I can't remember which one, I want to say Delta) and they approached her during deplaning and offered her a stay in the minors' room. Without her having said or done anything.
She gladly accepted (she is a great traveler with a good head on her shoulders, but just did not feel comfortable sleeping in a waiting room).
This year, she's flying by herself again - two transatlantic flights v.v. (so four total) and a domestic round trip. She's now 18. We were about to book the tickets and due to this whole mess have decided to steer clear of United. Any airline can mess up. But when you have such a track record and then descend even further into assault - no thank you.