Airline Passenger Complaints Soaring
WASHINGTON (AP) - It’s up, up and away for air travelers: Fares are up, late flights are up and more passengers are being bumped away from boarding gates. All these problems are making travelers grumpy, an annual survey of airline quality says.
The industry posted declines last year in every area of the Airline Quality Rating, amid rising fuel prices, safety problems and bankruptcy filings that shut down three carriers last week alone.
The biggest change was in the rate of consumer complaints, up 60 percent overall. The rate more than doubled at US Airways and Comair, and rose for 15 of the 16 airlines included in the study. The exception was Mesa Airlines.
On-time arrivals dropped for the fifth straight year, with more than one-quarter of all flights late, according to the survey. The rates of passengers bumped from overbooked flights and bags lost, stolen or damaged also jumped in 2007.
“The trend is bad and it doesn’t look like it gets any better,” said Dean Headley, an associate professor at Wichita State University and co-author of the study being released Monday.
The survey results mesh with the spate of problems that have beset U.S. carriers, starting with surging fuel costs, Headley said.
ATA, Aloha Airlines and Skybus stopped flying just last week because of financial pressures. Major airlines have slashed jobs and passenger amenities while adding fees for second bags, traveling with pets and booking tickets by phone.
It is not surprising that people responded to higher prices and more frequent delays by complaining more, Headley said.
Six airlines—Frontier, Northwest, SkyWest, Southwest, United and US Airways—showed declines in every area in the survey, although Southwest still had the best on-time arrival mark at 80.1 percent.
The Dallas-based carrier also had the lowest rate of consumer complaints, 0.26 per 100,000 passengers.
Still, the airline has not been immune from problems. It is fighting a record $10.2 million fine from the Federal Aviation Administration for continuing to fly dozens of Boeing 737s that hadn’t been inspected for cracks in their fuselages.
American, Delta and United airlines recently canceled flights to perform unscheduled inspections of certain aircraft, and US Airways found problems on some Boeing 757s after a wing part on one of its planes fell off during a flight.
The Airline Quality Rating study, compiled annually since 1991, is based on Transportation Department statistics for airlines that carry at least 1 percent of the passengers who flew domestically last year. The research is sponsored by the Aviation Institute at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and by Wichita State University.
The other airlines in the survey were AirTran, Alaska, American Eagle, Atlantic Southeast, Continental, Jet Blue and Mesa.
Among the study’s conclusions:
_The rate of consumer complaints about Mesa dropped by one-third and the airline also showed improvement in its rates of bumping passengers and mishandling bags.
_More than one-third of Atlantic Southeast Airlines flights were late, the worst on-time performance in 2007. The airlines also bumped passengers more often, at a rate of 4.5 per 10,000 passengers.
_JetBlue and AirTran were far ahead of their competitors in avoiding bumping passengers from flights, at 0.02 and 0.15 per 10,000 passengers, respectively.
_AirTran had the best baggage handling rate, at 4.06 mishandled bags per 1,000 passengers.
_American Eagle ranked last in baggage handling with 13.55 mishandled bags per 1,000 passengers.
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It is getting to the point that a greyhound trip looks like an alternative.
April 7th, 2008 at 3:50 amAirlines are the worst run corporations in this country. They suck, the management is a bunch of idiots. I am waiting for the first airline that tells me I have to pay more for a seat in a clean plane that is maintained in America. This stupid behavior of price cutting to the point that you cannot properly maintain planes and pay your employees does not grow business or gain loyal customers. That is why they shove the miles programs on you, to make you fly with some shithole airline so you can get a free ticket to fly on that same shithole airline. For the want of a free ticket on a dirty dangerous plane you keep them afloat.
The biggest fuck came after 9/11 when WE THE PEOPLE paid our taxes to float these companies that should have otherwise folded because they suck.