10,000 lost baggage

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all4scuba05

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Just saw on the news today that Us Air loses the most baggage. 10,000 a day...Hey thats what they said...can you imagine that many a day? Not gonna check my gear in with that airline...hell not gonna fly with them period when diving.
 
Where did you hear it? That sounds like a lot ot me...
 
I was reading this and I said to myself, man that sounds high. That must be per year or something. So I looked on line.

US AIR has 3743 flights a day.
So that is an average of 2.8 bags lost per flight.
Doesn't sound quite so high that way....
Still.... WOW!
 
You folks that don't check bags,...how do you get around in airports? I left my down pillow on a chair to go to the bathroom and some wizards watching from above via security cameras pounced me. They said YOU KNOW you can't leave things unattended in an airport! and she was kinda mean about it. I just cannot manage all that stuff.....how do you buy food, have a beer at the bar? maybe my layovers are longer..

not to mention shopping in Japan airport.
 
It might help to look at the published story - 10,000 a year for all US based airlinies, not just USAir...
Airlines Lost 10,000 Bags a Day Last Year

By Marilyn Adams, USA TODAY

(Feb. 17) - U.S.-based airlines last year lost about 10,000 bags a day on average, the worst performance since 1990.

Who Was Worst in 2005?

Source: dot.gov/USA Today

The overall lost luggage rate soared 23 percent from 2004 to 2005. (I almost read this as a 23 loss rate, but it's not. The overall rate is up 23% from last year, which is bad.)

The rate of lost suitcase reports per 1,000 passengers on flights soared 23% from a year earlier, according to recent numbers from the U.S. Department of Transportation. Among the reasons: a surge in the number of passengers, airline budget cuts, backed-up flights and tighter inspections of luggage.

In all, passengers filed with airlines more than 3.5 million reports of lost bags, most of which eventually find their way back to owners. Inside the 2005 numbers:

· US Airways, which exited Chapter 11 bankruptcy last year, had the highest lost-bag rate of major carriers.

· Southwest Airlines' rate of lost bags jumped nearly 27%. Southwest blames the airline's cranky new bag systems in Baltimore, Las Vegas and Phoenix.

· Delta Air Lines, third-biggest airline, lost more bags than any other carrier. Its customers filed 573,419 lost bag reports.

Barry Maher, who gives speeches on customer service, was one. Delta lost both his bags last April on a trip from Ontario, Cal., to Roanoke, Va. Maher rushed out to buy a shirt, slacks and underwear so he could give a speech. His bags arrived at his hotel in time for him to return home. On the trip back, Delta lost both bags again. Delta's staff was "uncaring," he says.

Delta spokeswoman Chris Kelly said Delta, now in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, knows its bag system needs work.

"Delta is focused on making significant progress," she said.

US Airways gave flier Rex Greer heartburn last year. The auditor flew US Airways 26 times. It lost his bags six times. He says he's "lucky" because the losses usually happened on his way home.

US Airways customer service chief Anthony Mulé says, "It will get better." US Airways, which merged in bankruptcy with America West, has added ground workers and new equipment for handling bags.

Wine executive David Kelly lost his suitcase when American Airlines canceled his flight to New York last summer but didn't take his bag off the plane. His bag reappeared 48 hours later. This, he says, is why "overhead compartments are always overflowing."
 
going to the bathroom while in an airport is being discussed in another thread. :D
 
dlndavid:
going to the bathroom while in an airport is being discussed in another thread. :D
Can you give me a link? :silly:

Yeah, if I'm traveling alone, everything goes where I go, period. But then, I'm more concerned about theft.

smiley-linie-008.gif

 

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