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Originally Posted by fotographer
(Post 32003317)
As other flyers have probably been noticing.. the Airlines.. not only AA, have been on a constant downhill slope in terms of the care of all passengers, but more so their elite flyers.
I, remember a time, when PLT was the highest published level that I knew off, and the AA actually had PLT spots/offices at the DFW airport, where even for a minor delay in travel resulted in food coupons that amounted to a lot of money (used them to clear out cookies at the airport for my daughter ) and you kind of felt nice about flying. These days, oh well.. you are just another passenger on a plane, and its not the staff at AA, its the management. on side note: when flying on BA, even when I was sitting in Coach.. I always got group 1 boarding on AA has a EXP if not in first.. then group 2... that sucks.. I want group 1 boarding back |
Originally Posted by USFlyerUS
(Post 32003229)
So AA was able to get you a different seat in J but you still canceled the flight, are writing Doug Parker, cancelling all your AA-branded credit cards, and donating your 1,000,000+ miles? You weren't bumped back to Y or W? IMHO, while the seat change is annoying, it's hardly worth the effort to do all that and call it "outrageous". Every J seat is an aisle seat. As others have said, there could be legitimate reasons AA could not share with you that your seat got changed. And, FYI, DL also changes seats, so switching to DL for this reason won't prevent such a thing from happening again.
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Originally Posted by Tintin
(Post 32003355)
Yes! Completely agree. When I started flying AA in 2006, I had no status, but it was a pleasure. Before I used to fly Northwest. Delta acquired Northwest and I moved to AA because AA was the most highly regarded airlines in the US at that time. I also agree about Elite benefits. Airlines don't like the elites. They think elites pay the least price for luxury service. We do buy Economy tickets and upgrade it. Use high-end loungers, pre-order foods, etc. etc. These are the services US airlines don't want to provide. That is why AA require $60,000 spend to acquire CK status. Yes, I know this, and I expect it to get worse in foreseeable future. Hotels are doing the same thing as well. Thanks.
first you reduce the SWU with no improvement in actually being able to use them then you had a dollar amount to qualify, again with no added benefit.. then of course you have people like me, that get sucked in to trying to qualify for status, so that I can enjoy the benefits on other OW airlines (way better treatment then AA) |
Originally Posted by USFlyerUS
(Post 32003229)
So AA was able to get you a different seat in J but you still canceled the flight, are writing Doug Parker, cancelling all your AA-branded credit cards, and donating your 1,000,000+ miles? You weren't bumped back to Y or W? IMHO, while the seat change is annoying, it's hardly worth the effort to do all that and call it "outrageous". Every J seat is an aisle seat. As others have said, there could be legitimate reasons AA could not share with you that your seat got changed. And, FYI, DL also changes seats, so switching to DL for this reason won't prevent such a thing from happening again.
Obviously each of us has our own seating preferences but being a FT reader should be sufficient to understand that seat assignments are not guaranteed and to understand that given the timing and OP's seat location it's 100% an air marshal situation. Nothing AA can do about it and yes, it's insane to demand reaccom to BA in this situation (moreso given that OP has upgraded using an AA instrument, which isn't valid on BA). |
By the way, there is no "seat assignment department". I'm sure the supervisor was just taking the time to see if there were any other available options suitable for the poster.
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As noted some seat re-assignments are out of AA's control. A FAM, a child that needs to be seated with at least one parent/legal guardian or someone that is a caregiver to another. In that situation it's a sole traveler that is going to be re-seated. Yes it sucks but AA (and no other airline) doesn't guarantee seat assignments. AA cannot manufacturer a window or aisle seat out of thin air if seats are taken.
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Originally Posted by newyorkgeorge
(Post 32004521)
As noted some seat re-assignments are out of AA's control. A FAM, a child that needs to be seated with at least one parent/legal guardian or someone that is a caregiver to another. In that situation it's a sole traveler that is going to be re-seated. Yes it sucks but AA (and no other airline) doesn't guarantee seat assignments. AA cannot manufacturer a window or aisle seat out of thin air if seats are taken.
Don't get me wrong, it certainly seems like s/he's cutting his/her nose off to spite his/her face, but it's not like there's nothing that can be done. |
Originally Posted by ijgordon
(Post 32005203)
Well, they could bump out a "lower priority" customer from a preferred window seat and give it to the OP.
it certainly seems like s/he's cutting his/her nose off to spite his/her face |
Curiously, it just occurred to me that I've never had a middle seat in J in AA's 1-2-1 configs. I book window but even when I've been upgraded I've always had a window. (Not counting a couple I got back around 2013 between PHL and CLT.)
But I can't imagine flipping out that I got a center-aisle seat, especially on a red-eye where you can't even look out the window and see anything. I recently got upgraded to 1A on an A332, got the last J seat, taking a wild guess it was held back until the end as a FAM hold but when it became clear it wasn't going to be used for that purpose, I got it. (It was a 4-hour flight so crew rest wasn't an issue.) It's one thing to go from MCE to a middle seat in the back. It's another to go from a J seat with aisle access to another with aisle access, when there's nothing to look out of the window and see. I vote for the OP to go to DL. One less EXP to compete with me for upgrades. |
Originally Posted by WindowSeatFlyer
(Post 32005653)
While the poster may have benefitted from such a policy this time, it may end up working against him some other time
when a CK wants his seat, or someone purchasing a C class ticket wants the seat he got via an SWU. |
Please don’t switch to Delta. We don’t need more customers who throw tantrums like this.
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Seat re-assignments likely never see a human hand. The computer has an adult and child ticketed in F and it's been programmed to make sure they are seated together. Unfortunately (and I do this for a living) you can only get so detailed with automated workflows. So the system seeks a sole flyer (possibly upgraded not a paid ticket) and makes the changes and only human intervention could consider a multitude of factors in the seat change. No airline is going to have people sitting around all day doing seat changes.
Most of the time if the flyer catches the seat change early enough they can find a desirable alternative. Other times it's going to be I wanted a window but got an aisle. In 20 years of flying AA this has happened to me maybe twice. |
So just to confirm, someone is upset about being moved from one business class seat to another business class seat, all of which have aisle access? And the OP was in business using a SWU? Just making sure I understand this.
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Originally Posted by Whiskey_bravo
(Post 32009219)
So just to confirm, someone is upset about being moved from one business class seat to another business class seat, all of which have aisle access? And the OP was in business using a SWU? Just making sure I understand this.
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Originally Posted by lookitsapianist
(Post 32009337)
I think you missed the part where they turned down the offer of miles because that wasn’t a good enough resolution for this nightmare, but yes, you’ve pretty much got the gist. :D
Wow, ok. I have to admit I was hoping I was confused. |
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