Tag Archives: United Airlines

United Airlines: Disabled Customer Disservice Reaches New Heights in the Friendly Skies

Debbie says:

We’re overdue for a long, thoughtful Body Impolitic post, and you’ll get one in the next day or so. Meanwhile, here’s your weekly ration of outrage: Rachel W (evilpuppy)’s United Airlines flight last week.

Let’s make it a quiz:

You are a paid flight attendant for United Airlines, and a young disabled woman is brought to your airplane in a wheelchair (another part of her story). Do you:

1) Appreciate her business, take her at her word about her disability, and help her graciously when she asks for help putting her baggage in the overhead bin?
2) Distrust her because she doesn’t “look disabled,” but decide that you are, after all, an “attendant” and you might as well pretend to take her at her word?
3) Flatly refuse to help her with her luggage and tell her a passenger will probably help her sooner or later?

I boarded the plane and made my way back to my aisle seat where I set down my special seat cushion and lumbar brace before looking around for a flight attendant to help me put my luggage in the overhead compartment. The attendant standing in the front section of economy was a blonde woman probably in her late 40s-50s and I called her over to explain that I needed her assistance because I wasn’t capable of lifting my luggage due to my disability. To my surprise, the attendant rejected my request while excusing it by saying: “If I helped everyone do that all day then MY back would be killing me by the end of the day!” I asked her how I was supposed to get my luggage stowed and her answer was: “You’ll just have to wait for someone from your row to come back here and ask them to give you a hand.” When I asked what would happen if no one would, her response to me was: “Well, normally a passenger is around to overhear something like this and they’ll offer to help with it on their own. You’ll just have to ask someone when they get back here.” Then she turned back around and went up to the front seats where she waited to “assist” other passengers.

You are a passenger on a United Airlines flight. A woman has placed her bag as far out of the aisle as she can without putting it on her lap or in the overhead bin. Nonetheless, you can’t help but trip over it because the aisle is narrow, and when you trip on it, it hits her. Do you:

1) Apologize for the bag hitting her and ask if she needs help?
2) Glare at her and ask her why her bag is in the way, giving her an opportunity to tell you she needs help?
3) Walk on to find your seat?

I sat down to wait and pulled my carry-on suitcase as close as I could to try to get it out of the way of the aisle. As I’m sure you’re aware, however, your aisles are considerably narrow and even my best efforts left half of even my small carry-on suitcase in the aisle. What’s more, rather than help me, most of the passengers simply knocked into my suitcase and shoved past me on the way to their own seats. Every time they hit the suitcase, it in turn hit me and jarred my back more and more with each strike. The plane wasn’t even half boarded and it already felt like the pain medication I’d taken less than a half hour prior to entering the airport had worn off as though I hadn’t taken it at all.

Perhaps the only bright spot in the whole story is the piece about the genuinely friendly and sympathetic passenger who did finally help her … after she asked.

You are a supervisor for United Airlines at a destination airport, and a young disabled woman has come to make a complaint. Do you:

1) Listen closely to what she says and apologize for her difficulties as a passenger for your employer?
2) Give some lip service to the Americans with Disabilities Act and tell her that her next United flight will be better, even if you don’t believe a word she’s saying?
3) Tell her the whole thing was her fault, and she doesn’t have to fly your airline if she wants unreasonable things like help lifting her baggage over her head?

It was obvious to me from the beginning that it was going to be a difficult conversation when the first words she said to me were spoken in a very condescending and put-out tone: “They’ve already told me basically what you want, but why don’t you tell me what happened?” Rather than say anything about her tone, I instead told her exactly what had happened from my first arrival to the airport in Seattle all the way down to my arrival at the customer service desk there at SFO. As it turned out, my gut-feeling that the conversation would not be pleasant were well and truly proven beyond any shadow of a doubt with the next words out of her mouth.

“I won’t apologize for her actions and I’m not sorry for what happened to you. It’s not in our contract to assist passengers with their luggage and we reserve the right to refuse assistance to anyone. If that’s what you need, then perhaps in the future, you should make other travel arrangements.”

[She told me] that I had the option of writing a letter which I told her I had every intention of doing since coming to file a complain in person turned out to be completely futile and a waste of time, energy, and emotional wellbeing. I also told her I’d be mentioning her and the fact that the combined actions of everyone I’d encountered from United had guaranteed I wouldn’t be flying with you at any point in the future.

Dina quite literally turned up her nose at me at that point and said: “You, of course, have the option to choose who you want to fly with, but again, it’s not in our contract. Besides, there’s a note that says your bag was heavy.” I cut her off before she could say more and asked her who it was that said that. She told me it would have had to be someone at the ticket counter in Seattle, and I flat out told her that was amazing considering that there wasn’t a single, solitary person involved with United at either airport who’d laid a hand on my bag. Not one. So not only was I dealing with the immensely upsetting experience of being told it was my own fault I was in pain for not making arrangements to fly without luggage since I knew I was disabled and needed assistance, I was also dealing with having someone lie about the weight of my luggage in some sort of bizarre effort to explain their lack of help.

You can completely leave all disability politics aside. You can leave basic politeness aside. You can leave any kind of sympathy, fellow-feeling, or “there but for the grace of [whatever I believe in] go I” aside. You still have to contend with the bottom line of consumer capitalism: customers may not be always right, but they pay your salaries.

There are 711 comments on this blog entry right now. I haven’t taken the time to do more than skim the first few, but I assure you that most of them are not defending United Airlines. Both the flight attendant and the supervisor could well lose their jobs over this one: Rachel is taking it everywhere public that she can, and it’s just not going to sound good on the evening news.

We’d all love to live in a world where people do the right things for the right reasons (see sympathy, fellow-feeling, etc. two paragraphs up). But at an absolute minimum, people should do the right things for the wrong reasons, like it’s more trouble to put up with the shitstorm afterward than to lift Rachel’s bag into the overhead bins.

If jonquil hadn’t posted this, I wouldn’t know about it yet. So pass the word yourselves; let’s make it a household word that this particular set of United Airlines employees showed themselves in the worst possible light.

Petitions for Comfortable Flying

Debbie says:

Fat activist Marilyn Wann is promoting two online petitions demanding that the airlines treat fat people reasonably. Here’s what she has to say:

When a human being buys a coach ticket from any airline, I believe that person can reasonably expect having a comfortable and accessible place to sit down during the flight. Fat people currently cannot depend on such a basic service. I believe that fat passengers do not want to encorach on the space of the chair of a thinner passenger adjacent to us. We want our OWN chair!

It is unconscionable to expect some passengers to pay double for something that all passengers should enjoy as a basic service…a safe, accessible, affordable place to sit down. Weight-discriminatory policies could only be proposed in a society that condones and encourages discrimination against fat people.

Recently, United Airlines and Ryan Air (a low-cost European carrier) have both proudly advertised adopting a charge-fatties-double policy. (In the US, United is the last major carrier to adopt such a policy, although not all airlines proudly advertise their divide-and-conquer inhospitality.)

United justified its policy change by stating it had received 700 complaints (out of at least 65 million passengers) last year. I found myself saying on one early morning tv program, “I guarantee you the fat person sitting next to those 700 thin people who complained to United weren’t having a comfortable trip, either. Why is it that thin people feel entitled to complain about discomfort and crowding and fat people don’t?”

The brilliant Lara Frater set up a petition online and gathered in a few days (not a year!) 700 signatures from people of all sizes who oppose weight-discriminatory pricing and policies at United.

Then, just as quickly, some fat-hating person hacked the petition and erased our voices.

I’m writing to ask you to take a moment and sign both of these online petitions to support fat people’s right to participate in air travel. Don’t let this protest go silent!

The new petition against United’s anti-fat policy

The petition against Ryan Air’s anti-fat policy, sponsored by French fat-poz group Allegro Fortissima:
(Note: This link is in French. Basically, it says that Ryan Air is treating people like baggage, and charging for extra kilos whether they’re on you or under the plane, and that this is absurd.)

Airlines need to meet basic costs of doing business (like providing passengers of all sizes with accessible seating) in a manner that is welcoming and hospitable and non-discriminatory.

I’ve signed both petitions. I hope you’ll consider doing the same.