In bullet form:
* I was pax on QF665 DEP 1800 BNE-ADL 28/11/08
* BNE airport had a number of QF and V cancellations
* included QF555(?) that was cancelled due to unserviceable aircraft - another thread here said it was lightning strike
* I am guessing we departed at 1820
* the flight was almost full
* bumpy ride from the outset
* no service except a few drinks to business class
* seatbelt light went off for just a few minutes then came back on and stayed on mostly
* lots of changes of altitude, direction and throttle
* at 1940(?) captain comes on and says that due to an impassable line of storms he had been unable to find a way through we had to go back to BNE
* things were busy with lots of aircraft and communications to manage and would get back to us when things quietened down
* further announcement that we had turned to head to SYD to refuel and then go on to ADL from there, but that we couldn't get to ADL by curfew so had to return to BNE
* apologised but that everything was out of our control and safety was first consideration
* landed at 2112
So, are lightning strikes or threat or turbulence sufficient reason not to travel through storms in East-Central Australia these days? Is it any different to other geographies? Is QF super-conservative given recent turbulence issues etc., or did the lightning strike spook the captain?
* After landing we were told that accomm/onward travel would all be arranged for us, but that the arrangements weren't known at this stage
* We should report to Ticketing Counter on ground floor
* everyone offloaded and went to ticketing counter
* ticketing counter was handling a bunch of offloaded pax from another flight (I guess a regional) - there was no room for 150 people to queue down there - that was a stupid idea
* then they came down and said we had to go to CityFlyer desk on Level 1
* back through the single remaining security checkpoint to the 1st floor
* no room up there to queue either
* one person on the counter (a very good natured woman)
* another guy came up 20 min later with a couple of cops (I think they anticipated that things would get ugly... now why would you think that except that you knew it was cough service you were going to deliver)
* a couple of hosties from another flight joined in to help bless their cotton socks - I suspect they were just kind-hearted souls
* lots of "Thank you for your patience" announcements but little info
* no systems or processes for handling the situation
* everyone stood in queue for hours - babies, mothers, old people - everyone
* arriving hoards of pax off other flights had their eyes hanging out their heads looking at this pathetic scene, as did their crews
* eventually at 2240 (I was 1/3rd of the way through the queue) I got a hotel room at "Terrace on Wickham" and cab vouchers and recommendation to keep receipts for my meals
* there was no effective triaging of the BNE-domiciled pax to help them get home for a good night's sleep
* they took more than 90 minutes until they eventually completed the survey of how many hotel rooms they would need
* then an announcement that there would be a supplementary flight to dep at 0800 today (Sat) and to be at the airport 1 hour before for normal check-in arrangements
God knows how long it took the rest of the pax to get sorted out.
If you were also on this flight please provide info of your experience and corroborate my times (these are working back from the phone calls I made).
So about QF customer service when there is an incident like this:
* why no systematic approach
* why, if they knew the aircraft was returning, didn't they force the staff to stay?
* why couldn't the estimates of how many rooms they need have been worked out - they had all the data - even printing it out and counting (and what are bloody computers for?) would have taken 5 minutes
* why couldn't they have stuck us all on a bus straight away and taken us to the hotel(s)?
These are just a few of the questions.
If you have been on flights like the O2 canister, or the clear air turbulence incidents, how were you handled?
If you have been on a cancelled flight or a redirected flight recently, how were you handled?
Do you think QF BNE is just incompetent or it is systemic?
I intend to write to Alan on this and would like more info about other people's experience.
Cheers,
Andrew.
* I was pax on QF665 DEP 1800 BNE-ADL 28/11/08
* BNE airport had a number of QF and V cancellations
* included QF555(?) that was cancelled due to unserviceable aircraft - another thread here said it was lightning strike
* I am guessing we departed at 1820
* the flight was almost full
* bumpy ride from the outset
* no service except a few drinks to business class
* seatbelt light went off for just a few minutes then came back on and stayed on mostly
* lots of changes of altitude, direction and throttle
* at 1940(?) captain comes on and says that due to an impassable line of storms he had been unable to find a way through we had to go back to BNE
* things were busy with lots of aircraft and communications to manage and would get back to us when things quietened down
* further announcement that we had turned to head to SYD to refuel and then go on to ADL from there, but that we couldn't get to ADL by curfew so had to return to BNE
* apologised but that everything was out of our control and safety was first consideration
* landed at 2112
So, are lightning strikes or threat or turbulence sufficient reason not to travel through storms in East-Central Australia these days? Is it any different to other geographies? Is QF super-conservative given recent turbulence issues etc., or did the lightning strike spook the captain?
* After landing we were told that accomm/onward travel would all be arranged for us, but that the arrangements weren't known at this stage
* We should report to Ticketing Counter on ground floor
* everyone offloaded and went to ticketing counter
* ticketing counter was handling a bunch of offloaded pax from another flight (I guess a regional) - there was no room for 150 people to queue down there - that was a stupid idea
* then they came down and said we had to go to CityFlyer desk on Level 1
* back through the single remaining security checkpoint to the 1st floor
* no room up there to queue either
* one person on the counter (a very good natured woman)
* another guy came up 20 min later with a couple of cops (I think they anticipated that things would get ugly... now why would you think that except that you knew it was cough service you were going to deliver)
* a couple of hosties from another flight joined in to help bless their cotton socks - I suspect they were just kind-hearted souls
* lots of "Thank you for your patience" announcements but little info
* no systems or processes for handling the situation
* everyone stood in queue for hours - babies, mothers, old people - everyone
* arriving hoards of pax off other flights had their eyes hanging out their heads looking at this pathetic scene, as did their crews
* eventually at 2240 (I was 1/3rd of the way through the queue) I got a hotel room at "Terrace on Wickham" and cab vouchers and recommendation to keep receipts for my meals
* there was no effective triaging of the BNE-domiciled pax to help them get home for a good night's sleep
* they took more than 90 minutes until they eventually completed the survey of how many hotel rooms they would need
* then an announcement that there would be a supplementary flight to dep at 0800 today (Sat) and to be at the airport 1 hour before for normal check-in arrangements
God knows how long it took the rest of the pax to get sorted out.
If you were also on this flight please provide info of your experience and corroborate my times (these are working back from the phone calls I made).
So about QF customer service when there is an incident like this:
* why no systematic approach
* why, if they knew the aircraft was returning, didn't they force the staff to stay?
* why couldn't the estimates of how many rooms they need have been worked out - they had all the data - even printing it out and counting (and what are bloody computers for?) would have taken 5 minutes
* why couldn't they have stuck us all on a bus straight away and taken us to the hotel(s)?
These are just a few of the questions.
If you have been on flights like the O2 canister, or the clear air turbulence incidents, how were you handled?
If you have been on a cancelled flight or a redirected flight recently, how were you handled?
Do you think QF BNE is just incompetent or it is systemic?
I intend to write to Alan on this and would like more info about other people's experience.
Cheers,
Andrew.