A Rant Against Delta Air Lines

I want to tell you about our miserable experience with Delta Air Lines.  Let me start by writing that our bad flight experience did not occur during our flight to Hawaii.  The crew members of the Delta flight to Hawaii were very helpful and gracious.  This rant is directed towards some members of the ground crew and the short-hop flight crew from D.C. to Atlanta.  Let me also preface this by writing that our situation is unique in that we are in the process of relocating long term to Korea and carried with us an unwieldy amount of carry-on baggage, and we were (are) all ill with the stomach flu.  That in and of itself made our traveling difficult.

The trouble started on the short hop flight from Washington Reagan National Airport to Atlanta Hartsfield on a Delta flight piloted by a crew operating out of Cincinnati.  If you fly the 8:05 a.m. route out of D.C., watch out.  In general, they are a very rude air crew and in my opinion have forgotten the meaning of customer service.  I am thankful we didn’t have the bad experience so many had with U.S. Air over Christmas, but we were still miserable because of the thoughtlessness of that Delta flight crew.  I imagine that Delta’s current troubles and flirtation with bankruptcy have much to do with their overall poor level of customer service.  The experience was bad enough that I will no longer fly Delta unless I am required to do so.   I also plan to write to complain to Delta and don’t mind sharing this story to give you a heads up about flying Delta if you have young children.

Our trouble started when we boarded the plane without special assistance.  As parents with small children, airlines usually take special care to ensure that people with special needs receive appropriate assistance.  Apparently Delta has discontinued the age-old tradition of pre-boarding for the handicapped, elderly, and parents with small children.  In an effort to save money and act more like no-frills leader Southwest Air Lines, Delta also discontinued boarding row by row and now board by “zones”.  We had the misfortune of flying on a full flight with seats in one of the last “zones” to board the plane.  We waited dutifully for our turn and were among the last to board the plane.  We were rushed and were told upon entering the plane that we could not stow our carry-on luggage as carry-ons–we would have to check them in.  We were told that we had “4 minutes” before the plane departed to get in our seats.  That would have been fine if we did not have children, but as a family with a small child and many carry-ons for our trip to Korea, including car seat and child backpack, we needed time to get ourselves situated.  The flight crew took our carry-ons and checked our son’s toys for the flight in all the way through to Honolulu!  He would have had to make it through all the way to Honolulu (over 11 hours plus connection) with little to keep him preoccupied.  I cannot believe that not once did any Delta employee–from the ticketing agent to the gate to the flight crew–offer to assist our family prior to boarding, and after we boarded we were treated very rudely.

While this experience was very irritating, what really makes me rant is that we were offhandedly accused by some employees of not knowing the rules and not asking for assistance ourselves.  In our ignorance we did not know pre-boarding had been discontinued.  We waited for a window of opportunity to come forward for assistance, but the window we expected was not there.  Not one Delta employee recognized us as a family in need and offered to assist us, even after I asked one ground crew member whether we had too much carry-on baggage.

In addition, we were told by the short-hop flight crew after the fact to ask for assistance before our next flight.  So, guess what…that’s what I did for our next flight in Atlanta.  Right before boarding for the Hawaii flight began I specifically went up to ask for assistance for my family.  I was told that we had to board “by zone” and that we would have to wait our turn.  That was the last straw.  I wasn’t about to put up with that after all the nastiness we received from the previous flight crew about not asking for assistance.  I grew animated, and we told our story to every sympathetic customer we could find.  I finally found a second Delta crew member who took pity on us and assisted us.  I am very thankful for what she did for us, and she should be commended for doing what her coworkers should have done all along.  Passengers are not cattle to be herded; they are customers who need to be treated as such.  It’s common courtesy anyone should have the right to expect.

Aloha from O'ahu

Aloha and greetings from beautiful, rainy O’ahu Island.  I’m looking out the window at my brother’s home outside of Honolulu admiring the picturesque palm trees, tiki torches, and dark rain clouds.  Yes, we arrived in Hawaii during a wet spell.  Although it was sunny a few hours ago, it’s pretty much rained ever since we arrived yesterday evening.  Nonetheless, I’m happy to be here.  I’m glad to be underway at long last, and I’m relieved finally have a chance to relax and spend time with my brother and family.  We last saw them in November when they came to visit us in the D.C. area.  I hope that the weather improves, especially since the NFL Pro Bowl will take place here tomorrow.  The weather feels more like a fall day on the mainland than what you would expect in paradise.  My brother assured me that, contrary to popular belief, Hawaii is not balmy year-round.  Our first trip to Hawaii was much difficult.  Our son was not yet born and the weather was spectacular.  We came here for the first time in 1998 and visited O’ahu, Maui, and the Big Island.  We’re hoping to come back within a couple of years and visit Kauai…when the weather is better.

The last few days have punished our bodies and spirits.  Our packout and apartment checkout turned out to be much more difficult than expected.  My wife fell ill with a stomach flu and gave it to both my son and me, and we’ve all felt terrible ever since.  I feel better now, although my stomach is still restless.  My wife and son are still under the weather.  The flight from D.C. to Hawaii via Atlanta made life even worse for us.  I am not happy with our treatment by Delta Airlines and will rant about that on another day.  The flight exacerbated our illnesses, and we were all miserable the entire time.  No one enjoys a 10-hour flight; having the stomach flu made it much worse.  However, my son was a real trooper and did well on the flight.  I am so proud of him!  I’m really thankful that my brother put us up (or should I say put up with us?) for the weekend so we could all rest and recuperate.  We still have another 11 hour flight to Seoul and need our strength for the final leg of the journey.  I hope we can all get over this illness and have a much better experience during our flight to Seoul. 

And the winner is…

The New England Patriots won this year’s Independence Bowl…er Superbowl, 24-21.  The Philadelphia Eagles hung tough but weren’t quite able to overcome the Pats.  So the Pats have now become a dynasty.  I guess it’s time to put them on my "Do not root for" list.  I prefer greater sports parity.  Although I don’t mind when a team wins multiple championships, I don’t like to see one or two teams dominate a league over a long period of time.  For example, I love baseball, but I don’t like to see the New York Yankees perenniel contenders.  Kansas City Royals fans have just as much right to see their team competitive without having to spend $200+ million in payroll each year.  The Yankees need to go through a few lean years like the Bulls did after Michael Jordan retired.  That the Pats have won 3 of the last 4 Superbowls in a league with a salary cap is quite an achievement.  We’ll see how many more they can win.  At least the Superbowl was a good one with excitement and there weren’t any wardrobe malfunctions this year.  Because we don’t have cable I wasn’t able to watch the game on TV–I kept up with the play-by-play on ESPN.com.

My mom came for a short visit before we leave for Korea.  I’m glad she could come and see us and her grandson before we leave for Korea.  We’ll see her again at Christmastime this year, but that seems very far away from now.  She spent the day touring D.C. while I spent the day checking out at work before heading overseas.  I accomplished a lot today (and still have a lot left to do).  Our house is starting to look like a disaster hit it with all the boxes and suitcases scattered about.  It will be even more so tomorrow as we prepare for the packers to arrive.  The packers arrive on Wednesday morning along with the automobile shippers, and the furniture people come on Thursday afternoon to take away the furniture.  We move into temporary furnished quarters on Wednesday, and we will clean our apartment and check out on Thursday.  On Friday morning come hither or thither we will be on an airplane headed to Hawaii (via Atlanta).  I can’t wait until this is over and the craziness subsides.  That probably won’t happen until we are finally settled in Seoul with all of our belongings. 

Dear reader, it is possible that I may not be able to post again for awhile.  I will try to post again tomorrow, but if I am too busy or do not have an Internet connection because of the move I may not be able to write until next weekend.  We’ll see what happens.