A Singapore Airlines Multi-Airline Ticket Disaster: Who Is To Blame?

A Singapore Airlines Multi-Airline Ticket Disaster: Who Is To Blame?

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An OMAAT reader shared an incredibly frustrating experience he recently had, and asked for my take. This is one of those situations where the traveler gets screwed, and actually making things right is extremely complicated.

Flight misconnect triggers a mess of an itinerary

Jamie was recently traveling from Dublin (DUB) to Auckland (AKL) on a cash business class ticket booked through Singapore Airlines. He was scheduled to fly on Aer Lingus from Dublin to Paris (CDG), then on Singapore Airlines to Singapore (SIN), and then on a Singapore Airlines codeshare on Air New Zealand to Auckland. His first layover was scheduled to be 1hr45min, while his second layover was scheduled to be 1hr10min.

The initial Aer Lingus flight was delayed by around two hours, so to avoid misconnecting, he was denied check-in and told he needed to be rerouted, which is fair enough. Unfortunately this is where things go (way) downhill. I know this is long, but a lot happened, and I don’t think I can summarize it any more succinctly:

The Aer Lingus staff were a disaster. I asked them if I should call Singapore Airlines for assistance with the rerouting, they insisted firmly that I should not do so. I asked them to try to reroute onto the same itinerary with SQ, or similar via mainland Europe or the UK, which they ignored. I eventually was handed a printed confirmation and emailed with routing through Qatar on QR the following day, and was put in an overnight hotel in Dublin.

When I arrived at the airport to check in for the Qatar flight, the flight manager told me I wasn’t on the flight. After returning to Aer Lingus customer service I was told I had been rerouted again (possibly good to contact passengers if this happens?!), this time via LHR, with the first leg on Aer Lingus, then to DXB on British Airways, and finally AKL on Emirates. I was handed another printed confirmation, but only given boarding passes for the first two flights, when I asked for the third I was told they couldn’t do it and I would need to collect it at LHR.

At LHR, after asking British Airways representatives at the lounge for my flight for my onwards boarding pass, they told me that they could not see any flights beyond DXB (to quote the lounge agent after I explained the situation: “how could you expect me to print a boarding pass if you’ve made two separate bookings.” – good to see BA’s still saving on staff training at LHR).

I am usually quite a reserved and resolved person while travelling – I’ve been doing so from a very early age but for the first time in my life of travel I was in tears on the second flight due to the stress. The British Airways crew on this flight helped to calm me down and explained that it probably was because EK and BA don’t interline. How ridiculous is it to rebook someone onto two airlines that can’t even see each other’s flights? Is that even allowed??

Upon landing 30 minutes delayed, I had to self navigate a terminal transfer in Dubai, which as I’m sure you know is much easier said than done. All in all it took over an hour and involved a substantial amount of running and security checkpoints. When I finally arrived at the first available EK transfer desk, the flight had closed and I was told that Aer Lingus had failed to check me in for the third flight (WTF!?).

It was after a very tense phone call that they re-opened the flight to check me in, and only because I only had carry-on luggage. I finally made it home over a day late and absolutely shattered. At no point did Singapore Airlines make any effort to get in contact with me over the disruptions.

I got in touch with SQ afterwards who shared perhaps the bluntest customer service email I’ve ever received, telling me it wasn’t their fault, they wouldn’t help with EU261 claims. Further, they insisted that I could do nothing about claiming Air NZ Airpoints even though I took every reasonable step to board the flights.

I’ve now been in a standoff with Air NZ, because while SQ uses the U booking class for business fares, they use it for Premium Economy, and they’re not entertaining the idea that I was booked in business even though I have my booking confirmations and even had business seats selected.

Jamies asks me the following questions:

I mostly just want to know what to do here – are SQ really not responsible at all for the disruption that happened on their (very expensive) ticket? Do you think Aer Lingus was trying to save money by booking me on an incongruous itinerary, and is that even legal? What on earth do I do about these points, how is it ok to deny them after an involuntary reroute?!

An Aer Lingus misconnect made things very complicated

My take on this incredibly frustrating travel experience

I feel really bad for Jamie here — he booked an expensive business class ticket, did absolutely nothing wrong, and got totally screwed. Period. Talk about an immense amount of stress and inconvenience to deal with, after paying a huge premium for the privilege of traveling in comfort. So, let me share my thoughts on a few fronts.

The first lesson here is that I simply wouldn’t recommend booking a ticket like this, if at all avoidable. There’s just too much that can go wrong when you’re looking at two short connections on an ultra long haul itinerary, especially when you’re booking a ticket between interline partners that don’t even have a very close level of cooperation.

Let me be clear, I don’t want to victim blame here — Jamie did nothing wrong by booking a ticket like this, because the airline sold it. However, I just want to provide practical advice, so that travelers can minimize their odds of having a similar experience.

The advancements we’ve seen over the years in being able to book tickets between interline partners is great when everything goes as planned, but when things go wrong, it’s a complete disaster, as you’re passed off between airlines. The longer your layovers and the fewer number of airlines on a ticket, the better (or at least try to book airlines that cooperate closely together, like with a joint venture).

So, which airline is to blame here? If you misconnect, the airline that caused the missed connection is responsible for rebooking you. This is the rule across the industry. So Aer Lingus was indeed on the hook for getting Jamie to his final destination.

Obviously that’s easier said than done, and the way Jamie was treated here was embarrassingly bad. He was first rebooked on a Qatar Airways itinerary the following day, and then rebooked on British Airways flight connecting to an Emirates flight. What an absolute mess, because Aer Lingus and Emirates have a ticketing interline agreement, but British Airways and Emirates don’t.

I don’t know what the Aer Lingus representatives handling Jamie’s reservation were thinking, because this was a terrible way to handle the rebooking. The issue is that he’s now getting the runaround — even though Singapore Airlines issued the ticket, it isn’t responsible when another airline causes the missed connection. That’s not to say the airline shouldn’t aim to provide good service and do what it can, but based on how rules are published, the airline isn’t wrong.

Aer Lingus would be on the hook for EC261 compensation. The issue is actually getting the airline — or any party here — to care beyond that. I’ll of course write about this and will forward this to some contacts, but I’m not surprised that this is turning into a mess. These kinds of situations are where airline customer service is woefully insufficient.

So, if I had found myself in Jamie’s situation, what would I have done differently? I wasn’t there, so I obviously can’t say anything with certainty (and I’m also not sure to what extent Jamie tried these things):

  • If I really wanted to stick to a similar routing, I would’ve pushed harder and tried to escalate to keep the same routing, and might’ve even reached out to Singapore Airlines to try to rebook (even though it’s not their responsibility)
  • As soon as I was rebooked on Qatar Airways, I would’ve tried to check-in online and manage my reservation there, just to make sure everything looked correct, and I would’ve checked back a couple of times before departure
  • I would’ve just rejected the rebooking on British Airways connecting to Emirates and asked for a different routing, because being rebooked between two non-interline partners with a short connection isn’t good

All of that is of course easy to say in hindsight. No matter how you slice it, Jamie did nothing wrong, and this was collectively handled very poorly by airlines.

I’m not sure why Aer Lingus would rebook the passenger the way it did

Bottom line

While interline agreements are useful in terms of letting you book tickets that involve travel on multiple airlines that don’t otherwise partner, things quickly become messy when there are irregular operations. The shorter your connections and the more airlines are involved, the higher the chances of things going poorly.

OMAAT reader Jamie had perhaps the perfect storm of issues, when he misconnected on a Singapore Airlines ticket, where the first segment was on Aer Lingus. At a minimum, let this act as a warning before you book such a ticket, because these kinds of situations are where airlines really struggle to take any accountability, or to find acceptable solutions.

What do you make of this frustrating travel experience?

Conversations (53)
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  1. Likes-to-fly Diamond

    OMG. I believe it is Aer Lingus at fault (he should not let that go!), but perhaps things would resolve better if SQ was contacted directly.
    On the other hand, it is good to have a ticket only from Star Alliance partners in such case.

  2. KK Guest

    A similar thing happened to me 6 years ago when I had an Aer Lingus flight to Manchester and then Singapore Airlines onwards to Australia eventually. The Aer Lingus Flight got cancelled and they wanted to re-route me through multiple other airlines (in economy when I paid for Business) and not with SQ. Luckily I stood my ground and they flew me to LHR and then onwards with SQ. It was very stressful. I feel...

    A similar thing happened to me 6 years ago when I had an Aer Lingus flight to Manchester and then Singapore Airlines onwards to Australia eventually. The Aer Lingus Flight got cancelled and they wanted to re-route me through multiple other airlines (in economy when I paid for Business) and not with SQ. Luckily I stood my ground and they flew me to LHR and then onwards with SQ. It was very stressful. I feel if Aer Lingus were part of a large alliance, it would be much easier to re-route.

  3. Ross Guest

    He's letting the "where can I earn the best miles" tail wag the "how can I get from Point A to Point B" dog. This is what happens when people think "loyalty" programs have something to do with encouraging customers to be loyal. The best way to go from Ireland to New Zealand, is not with two stops and three airlines. Book stupid, get home a day late.

  4. Steve Guest

    OMAAT should reach out to Aer Lingus and SQ to get the other side of the story!

  5. Bobo Guest

    EVERY TIME I have had an Aer Lingus customer service experience, it has gone badly. Such a surprise in a nation of very nice people. But I won't even fly a OneWorld codeshare on them anymore.

  6. Raymond Guest

    SIA transacted in the book, the party that was supposedly responsible for the whole drama should be SIA. How SIA splits the responsibility is for SIA to deal with its other airlines, not the customer. SIA reputation has been going downhill over the past few years.

    My personal experience with SIA in a flight when the flight was just taking off, and the stewardess announced that "Ladies & gentlemen, we are landing soon, pls tighten...

    SIA transacted in the book, the party that was supposedly responsible for the whole drama should be SIA. How SIA splits the responsibility is for SIA to deal with its other airlines, not the customer. SIA reputation has been going downhill over the past few years.

    My personal experience with SIA in a flight when the flight was just taking off, and the stewardess announced that "Ladies & gentlemen, we are landing soon, pls tighten your seat belts ....", she read the wrong page. The entire plane passengers were shocked, I was amused.

  7. Alian Guest

    A judge in Singapore taught me this lesson > look at the letterhead of the invoice.

    In this case since Jamie bought an SQ ticket and paid SQ then SQ is responsible and SQ cannot outsource the problem away even EU261. Their problem with their partners is their problem and if they can’t resolve issues with their partners then they should terminate the partnership and not continue selling tickets

    Jamie should lodge a...

    A judge in Singapore taught me this lesson > look at the letterhead of the invoice.

    In this case since Jamie bought an SQ ticket and paid SQ then SQ is responsible and SQ cannot outsource the problem away even EU261. Their problem with their partners is their problem and if they can’t resolve issues with their partners then they should terminate the partnership and not continue selling tickets

    Jamie should lodge a small claims tribunal claim in Singapore since it’s SQ

  8. Peter Member

    The booking was ok, even a 6 hours connection time won’t help you if your Frist flight is 7 hours delayed. AerLingus is responsible for the EU261 compensation, nothing to do with SQ especially since the passenger did not bother to contact SQ early on when the issue happened, they might have been helpful to rebook them potentially via LHR or other European hub. Also suggesting a preferred routing to the airport agent might be...

    The booking was ok, even a 6 hours connection time won’t help you if your Frist flight is 7 hours delayed. AerLingus is responsible for the EU261 compensation, nothing to do with SQ especially since the passenger did not bother to contact SQ early on when the issue happened, they might have been helpful to rebook them potentially via LHR or other European hub. Also suggesting a preferred routing to the airport agent might be better than simply accepting whatever they come up with. They usually take whatever first option the computer spits out. But if you tell them which specific flights to book, they might oblige. Also AirNZ should be honouring the original routing credit request and put the original flight numbers and booking classes to the system and let it credit accordingly. The passenger could get extra miles on oneworld for the BA flight and Skyward miles with Emirates for the flight actualll taken.

  9. Joey Diamond

    Thank you Ben for sharing. I feel bad for Jamie and hope all will work out. If I were in Jamie's situation, I would have tried my best to be rebooked where all airlines were within the same alliance (DUB-DOH-AKL on oneworld or DUB-EWR-AKL on star alliance, etc.) After rebooking, I would have asked for the ticket number, PNR/reservation code/record locator, and itinerary. I would then fact-check each segment in the respective airline's website or...

    Thank you Ben for sharing. I feel bad for Jamie and hope all will work out. If I were in Jamie's situation, I would have tried my best to be rebooked where all airlines were within the same alliance (DUB-DOH-AKL on oneworld or DUB-EWR-AKL on star alliance, etc.) After rebooking, I would have asked for the ticket number, PNR/reservation code/record locator, and itinerary. I would then fact-check each segment in the respective airline's website or app. Yes I always ask for the eticket number in addition to the PNR since I had an issue in the past where I had a PNR but no eticket number and that created extra stress on travel day.

    1. yoloswag420 Guest

      There is no EWR-AKL flight. Only JFK-AKL.

  10. Ole Guest

    Recently, for our Maui trip, I booked a 50 min layover in SLC, the other one had 5hr layover and rest were getting me to Maui very late. The pilots for our DTW-SLC flight were late flying in so our flight got delayed by 50mins. Spent good amount of the flight texting with Delta agent to get it rebooked - SLC-SAN on DL, SAN-OGG in AS.

    Had asked multiple times how many were connecting from...

    Recently, for our Maui trip, I booked a 50 min layover in SLC, the other one had 5hr layover and rest were getting me to Maui very late. The pilots for our DTW-SLC flight were late flying in so our flight got delayed by 50mins. Spent good amount of the flight texting with Delta agent to get it rebooked - SLC-SAN on DL, SAN-OGG in AS.

    Had asked multiple times how many were connecting from our flight and if the SLC-OGG flight will be held for the connecting passengers. No response. After we land, FA announces the Maui flight is being held back. Had to run to make it.

    Lessons learned - It’s ok to be bored in an overcrowded lounge than to deal with the stress of missing fight connection day before your anniversary. NEVER AGAIN.

  11. Klaus_S Diamond

    I would book this ticket originating in the EU without hesitation. We have customer protection laws here and we have lawyer Dr. Böse who loves to take these cases to court.

    1. HkCaGu Guest

      The problem with EU261 is that no additional compensation is due beyond a 4-hour delay. It costs the guilty airline almost the same whether the final delay is 5 hours or 35 hours.

    2. Felix Guest

      I would do the same. Actually, I do like the risk return.

      1. Chance to get 600 Euro cash compensation
      2. Chance to get double miles thanks to original routing credit
      3. Chance to fly more interesting premium cabins

      Point 3 refers to the right to be rebooked on the next possible routing by any airlines.

      Most often the airline responsible for rebooking would not this so I would just write them an...

      I would do the same. Actually, I do like the risk return.

      1. Chance to get 600 Euro cash compensation
      2. Chance to get double miles thanks to original routing credit
      3. Chance to fly more interesting premium cabins

      Point 3 refers to the right to be rebooked on the next possible routing by any airlines.

      Most often the airline responsible for rebooking would not this so I would just write them an email and ask for the next possible routing, give them an appropriate time (maybe 2 hours). So far airlines never replied on time. So I would just book it on my own and ask for a refund. That worked so I had not to file a lawsuit.

      Dr. Böse has actually written a helpful guide on this topic.

      https://www.drboese.de/fluggastrechte/ersatzbefoerderung/

  12. derek Guest

    How does one find out which airlines interline, like BA and Emirates not?

    Aer Lingus terrible behavior is an example of why Ireland should cease to be considered a country and should be considered part of the UK. Simply have a One UK policy, like the One China Policy. Airlines would be forced to list it as Dublin UK on the website or face punishment.

    1. Icarus Guest

      What a xenophobic moron you are. If aer lingus has an interline agreement with emirates, they did nothing wrong in rebooking BA and EK since it was on their ticket

    2. Don Guest

      As someone with Irish ancestry I can tell you that many Irish would disagree with you. The suffering and treatment of the Irish at the hands of the English over many generations and centuries is not forgotten. The scares from those wounds are healing. But the generations of pain inflicted will take generations to heal.

  13. G. Gall Guest

    I am not reading previous comments, but I’m talking as a retired airline employee. Mr. Ben is right when he says that EI is responsible in this case. Apparently SQ is bypassing the Star Alliance golden rule to book Star Alliance carriers (e.g. LH to Germany, then all SQ if they are pleased or via ZRH or BRU, etc). It’s known that BA and EK are not partnering. The EI employee who rewrote the ticket...

    I am not reading previous comments, but I’m talking as a retired airline employee. Mr. Ben is right when he says that EI is responsible in this case. Apparently SQ is bypassing the Star Alliance golden rule to book Star Alliance carriers (e.g. LH to Germany, then all SQ if they are pleased or via ZRH or BRU, etc). It’s known that BA and EK are not partnering. The EI employee who rewrote the ticket just did it to get rid of a (most likely) easy case to rebook on involuntary, taking booking classes randomly, re issuing ticket without checking with involved carrier (QR on first instance) if everything was ok. Just because in was “invol”

    1. Icarus Guest

      If EI has an interline agreement there is no error in reaccommodating a customer on BA and EK as it’s an EI ticket. He had cabin baggage and would check in at DXB for the onward flight, as he couldn’t get a boarding pass issued before. That’s the norm.

  14. FNT Delta Diamond Guest

    I don't even like booking domestic USA flights, particularly in the winter when you often need to de-ice, with connections under 90 minutes. While the customer isn't to blame the customer should have exercised better judgment when booking the original reservation. It's no different than when you book a less-common route served once a day or four days a week by a given airline. If something happens, you're screwed.

    1. jd Guest

      This! I always tell my friends and family DO NOT book short connections but especially in the winter. Minimum 2-3 hours connection.

    2. FNT Delta Diamond Guest

      I just went through an epic fight with my corporate travel office over a January trip. They wanted to book me on a Delta flight through Minneapolis with a 37-minute connection. For context, Delta board 40 minutes before departure. So, even if I'm landing on-time, I'm landing 3 minutes AFTER boarding started. Boarding door closes 15 minutes before departure. So, in reality, I would have a 22-minute connection. The other option with a 2-hour connection...

      I just went through an epic fight with my corporate travel office over a January trip. They wanted to book me on a Delta flight through Minneapolis with a 37-minute connection. For context, Delta board 40 minutes before departure. So, even if I'm landing on-time, I'm landing 3 minutes AFTER boarding started. Boarding door closes 15 minutes before departure. So, in reality, I would have a 22-minute connection. The other option with a 2-hour connection was $700 more expensive.

  15. Icarus Guest

    It’s also not BA’s fault if you’re rerouted by one airline onto another. They don’t know what happened before. BA may check the booking and respond DXB was the final destination and would refer him back to aer lingus if there was no onward trip to AKL. If he had checked bags that would have been identified during the initial check in. For the boarding passes it would be in Dubai assuming he had an...

    It’s also not BA’s fault if you’re rerouted by one airline onto another. They don’t know what happened before. BA may check the booking and respond DXB was the final destination and would refer him back to aer lingus if there was no onward trip to AKL. If he had checked bags that would have been identified during the initial check in. For the boarding passes it would be in Dubai assuming he had an onward booking to Auckland. BA for example, can’t necessarily check you in for an emirates flight assuming there was a booking.

  16. Luke Guest

    For this statement to work one has to really know which airlines are in same alliance or interline that is "closely" or "not so closely". Almost need hard core accurate AI to figure it out while being put on the spot to immediately decide:

    "rejected the rebooking on British Airways connecting to Emirates and asked for a different routing, because being rebooked between two non-interline partners with a short connection isn’t good"

  17. Amritpal Singh Guest

    Aer lingus agent probably 7 whiskies deep

    1. Noa Guest

      It's giving "we misconnected and need a flight To Nice"

      When this kind of miss connects start happening, you should be double and triple checking your rebooking online and using online tools to get rebooked, instead of whatever the agent hands you

      OP should've gone online and found a same day acceptable itinerary to be rebooked on instead of a day later

  18. Debra Guest

    To me it was definitlely aerlingus at fault as the issue originated with them and it was your first flight.
    The lesson here for me (as i do the same journey but through LHR ) i wouldn't let them talk me into a diferent route or carriers.
    I hopefully have left enough time in LHR ( 3 Hours ) as its in the same terminal as SQ and hopefully EI will put my bags all the way through ( all on the ticket ) .

  19. Alonzo Diamond

    Customer takes some responsibility in this as well. Calling the airlines on the phone or sending a dm on X would have possibly avoided all of this. Idk how you just put your travel plans in the hands of some swirly gate agents.

    1. Kathy Arseoff Guest

      Alphonso,

      You are wrong. The Airlines have a duty to service the customer. A gate agent on a power trip is so wrong and disrespectful not only to the customer, but more importantly to the airline, Airport and THEMSELVES!

    2. Alonzo Diamond

      Karthtard,

      Why didn't he call?

    3. Kathy Arseoff Guest

      Lay off with the "tard", that is very rude and offensive. The customer does not have a duty to "call", it is thr Airlines responsibility to adequately deliver the service - an accountability which was blatantly cast aside. Customer is not at fault

    4. Albert Guest

      To be kept on hold for 45 minutes?!
      I much prefer to deal with someone who cannot escape until we are done.

  20. Kathy Arseoff Guest

    I am VERY disappointed to read this. This is criminal stupidity! Where is the respect for the customer??

  21. John Guest

    All solid advice from Lucky. I think the unspoken part was the possible inexperience of the traveller attempting to connect through several hubs with shockingly small connection windows everywhere, on a multi-leg, long haul itinerary, flown by multiple airlines(!!!) Or maybe he is an experienced traveller who felt comfortable (or complacent?) dicing with disaster? There's a lot of good to be had from taking itineraries with 4 - 6 hour connection windows, because boredom is...

    All solid advice from Lucky. I think the unspoken part was the possible inexperience of the traveller attempting to connect through several hubs with shockingly small connection windows everywhere, on a multi-leg, long haul itinerary, flown by multiple airlines(!!!) Or maybe he is an experienced traveller who felt comfortable (or complacent?) dicing with disaster? There's a lot of good to be had from taking itineraries with 4 - 6 hour connection windows, because boredom is better than a missed flight any day. Not to mention sticking with just one or at most two airlines for your whole trip...And as for Aer Dingus, the less said the better.

  22. Ben Guest

    Fly 1 airline or at least in the SAME alliance -

    1. Papa Bear Guest

      This is the only way.

  23. Justindev Guest

    The sh#*#*#t airlines have gotten away with and continue to get away with is ridiculous.

  24. Daniel Valenti Guest

    When booking connections on important flights, I always ask myself “and what happens if I miss it?”

    If it’s a once-per week flight to Bhutan, I’m going to be at the connection city 12-24 hours ahead of time.

    If it’s the first of 9 directs from DFW to MIA, then I’ll book the short connection knowing the result of a missed connection will be fine.

    I have become somewhat more defensive and aware...

    When booking connections on important flights, I always ask myself “and what happens if I miss it?”

    If it’s a once-per week flight to Bhutan, I’m going to be at the connection city 12-24 hours ahead of time.

    If it’s the first of 9 directs from DFW to MIA, then I’ll book the short connection knowing the result of a missed connection will be fine.

    I have become somewhat more defensive and aware of “Plan B” as I travel. Of course, nothing is 100% but I tend to know my stakes when going into it now.

    Of course, sometimes the reroutes are fun and they book you into full fare classes!

  25. InceptionCat Diamond

    I got angry reading the whole thing. So much could have been done differently.
    What was SQ thinking issuing that ticket with the short connection times? Even at SIN he’d be running from plane to the next gate!

    Also wouldn’t a routing with JV partner LH via FRA/MUC be better and more connections? Or are their flights from CDG that empty that SQ would rather book seats on Aer Lingus?!

    There’s no even lounge time with that itinerary. Poor Jamie.

    1. Icarus Guest

      What was SQ thinking ?? The point is it’s a valid connection and it’s likely booked online. Connections aren’t sold if the vast majority miss them. Unfortunately there was a delay. Transferring at SIN is fairly seamless. US carriers sell connections of 30 mins or less. Airlines even sell 90 min transfers at JFK from international to domestic which I would never personally do. The minimum for international to domestic should be 3 hrs.

  26. Eric Schmidt Guest

    I agree with the general advice, do not combine expensive premium tickets with a 2nd rate airline to get you there. Book all on one carrier, and get yourself to the hopping off point yourself, with time to spare.

    Unfortunately, when you buy a several thousand dollar ticket, it requires a bit of buyer's caution. He should've rejected the rebooking and gotten a ticket refund/cancellation.

  27. Icarus Guest

    Aer lingus was entirely responsible for rebooking as it was their delay. Nor is it about “ saving money “. Staff don’t consider that when rebooking. They look at the alternatives available, usually starting with partner carriers first. Hopefully when rebooking they actually reissued the ticket correctly as it can cause issues downline.

  28. Andrew Guest

    Poor Jamie :(. Most people do not travel frequently or have the knowledge you and us followers have. Jamie did nothing wrong. What a sh*tty situation.

  29. AeroB13a Diamond

    “Said it before, I will say it again” ….
    Sorry Jamie, but you pays your money and you take your chance!
    A well seasoned traveller would never have booked such a mixed up itinerary. One hopes that others learn from this hard earned lesson …. “Every day is a school day”, yes?

    1. Antwerp Guest

      You sound like the man who tells the woman..."Sorry that happened to you but now you know to always wear a skirt below your knees."

    2. AeroB13a Guest

      One is not a Scot, AnnTwerp. Scotsmen might well be Jocks in frocks and Twerps might well have another meaning altogether, yes?
      Best ask the little B13’s, Ok?

    3. AeroB13a Guest

      But how do you know that I am a “Man”, Ant?
      I could be a jock in a frock like travelling Willy, so that I can let it all hang out, yes?

  30. Mike Guest

    Said it before , I will say it again..
    Airlines get away with stuff no other industry can get away with.
    From my perspective, jame had a contract with SQ. They took his money and they need to make him whole. As simple as that.
    If they believe one of their sub contractors is at fault, they can pursue it with the other airlines, but sending Jamie to do it is absolutely obscene.

    1. Eskimo Guest

      I think the auto industry gets away with more stuff.

      The health care and insurance industry are also out of touch with reality.

      That being said, airline and ATC does get away with criminal negligence for allowing obsolete and unsafe technologies to operate.

    2. Albert Guest

      Exactly.
      Where in the contract or some court judgement does it say that SQ is not contractually responsible?
      Is the formal situation supposed to be that the customer consented to the contract being novated from SQ to EI?
      If so, where is informed consent to that novation?

  31. UncleRonnie Diamond

    Short transfers for international flights through large hubs is a bad idea.

    1. Kathy Arseoff Guest

      False. As long as your connecting flight is on the same airline you are okay. If a different airline then yes bad idea. Same airline means the airline has a "duty of care" to ensure that you get to your destination legally and Many airlines have this stipulated in the flight booking agreement.

    2. UncleRonnie Diamond

      The pax still takes the risk and it’s your business meeting or wedding or valuable 1 week beach holiday that gets screwed. Why even book that short connection if you don’t have to?

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

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Mike Guest

Said it before , I will say it again.. Airlines get away with stuff no other industry can get away with. From my perspective, jame had a contract with SQ. They took his money and they need to make him whole. As simple as that. If they believe one of their sub contractors is at fault, they can pursue it with the other airlines, but sending Jamie to do it is absolutely obscene.

5
Kathy Arseoff Guest

Lay off with the "tard", that is very rude and offensive. The customer does not have a duty to "call", it is thr Airlines responsibility to adequately deliver the service - an accountability which was blatantly cast aside. Customer is not at fault

2
InceptionCat Diamond

I got angry reading the whole thing. So much could have been done differently. What was SQ thinking issuing that ticket with the short connection times? Even at SIN he’d be running from plane to the next gate! Also wouldn’t a routing with JV partner LH via FRA/MUC be better and more connections? Or are their flights from CDG that empty that SQ would rather book seats on Aer Lingus?! There’s no even lounge time with that itinerary. Poor Jamie.

2
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