Delta STILL does not understand the TWOV rules
#16
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Nevertheless the GA and redcoat insisted that this could not be 72 hour TWOV because Shanghai cannot be a transit point, although my routing would have qualified for 24 hour TWOV. They said that to do 72 hour TWOV I would need to go to some other country like Thailand that requires a visa.
The only thing I just thought of - with the benefit of a calm and peaceful atmosphere sitting at home - is that if they were going to allow the 24 TWOV you might have taken that, changed your booking accordingly, and then changed it back once you reached NRT (most probably too late by the time you arrived in China as they'd only give you 24 hours if that's when your return was for).
Will be interesting to see how DL resolved your situation.
#17
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I was ticketed on one DL ticket for USA-NRT-PVG-USA, using (all DL marketed and DL operated) nonstop flights NRT-PVG, approximately 68 hours in Shanghai, and PVG-DTW nonstop.
Nevertheless the GA and redcoat insisted that this could not be 72 hour TWOV because Shanghai cannot be a transit point, although my routing would have qualified for 24 hour TWOV. They said that to do 72 hour TWOV I would need to go to some other country like Thailand that requires a visa.
They asked me whether I had called the US Embassy in China (NOT a Chinese consulate or embassy in the USA) and then the redcoat talked with a CBP guy who asserted that you cannot go to China without a visa.
I tried to show various printouts, including a printout from the SkyTeam link to TIMATIC done yesterday. I also had other printouts from Chinese consulates, etc. but the redcoat insisted that she was using "DL's own version of TIMATIC" properly.
The fact that I had done 72 hour TWOV earlier on exactly the same routing, and could show the TWOV stamps in my passport, made no difference since she claimed that the rules on this had changed this year.
WOW! So much for the suggestion that TWOV is easier now because the airlines have become accustomed to it.
Nevertheless the GA and redcoat insisted that this could not be 72 hour TWOV because Shanghai cannot be a transit point, although my routing would have qualified for 24 hour TWOV. They said that to do 72 hour TWOV I would need to go to some other country like Thailand that requires a visa.
They asked me whether I had called the US Embassy in China (NOT a Chinese consulate or embassy in the USA) and then the redcoat talked with a CBP guy who asserted that you cannot go to China without a visa.
I tried to show various printouts, including a printout from the SkyTeam link to TIMATIC done yesterday. I also had other printouts from Chinese consulates, etc. but the redcoat insisted that she was using "DL's own version of TIMATIC" properly.
The fact that I had done 72 hour TWOV earlier on exactly the same routing, and could show the TWOV stamps in my passport, made no difference since she claimed that the rules on this had changed this year.
WOW! So much for the suggestion that TWOV is easier now because the airlines have become accustomed to it.
I did a TWOV at PVG last year, and I did it on separate PNRs, so I had to research the rules very thoroughly as I knew I may have had a fight on my hands:
Both the embassy and the TIMATIC wording make it very clear that you must be travelling to a third country in order to take advantage of the TWOV rules. So, something like JFK-PVG-DTW is not allowed (it's an open jaw, but you are still travelling to/from the same country). The point about needing to travel to a country that you need a visa for is just wrong, and a red herring, you could legitimately do JFK-PVG-LHR and TWOV in PVG, even though if you are a US passport holder, you don't need a visa for the UK.
But, I fear that, as far as Delta is concerned, DTW-x-NRT-PVG-DTW, is equivalent to DTW-PVG-DTW, and is not allowed as a TWOV (after all, you can do an international connection at NRT and never enter Japan, so you would never have actually involved a third country).
Useless advice now, but it looks to me like your best bet would have been to get them to check you to NRT only, exited to landside at NRT, and then re-checked in for the PVG flight at NRT, which would then have been completely OK, and TIMATIC would have agreed with you (and anyway, the DL staff at NRT have got to be better than the US ones...) - if your ticket allowed it, that would have been the path of least resistance.
I disagree with the assertion that you should just get a Chinese visa - if you are allowed to use TWOV, then you should be able to use it, and DL should allow it! Unfortunately, assuming an on-line connection at NRT, I think you've been caught in one of the "edge cases" of the TWOV rules.
Of course, if the DL staff had a clue about either visa rules or customer service, they should have suggested the above to you at the time - shouldn't they?
Ken.
Willard the Bear - Thankfully, Bears are exempt from all Visa restrictions. (Though some nice immigration officers have been willing to stamp my passport anyway!)
#18
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But, I fear that, as far as Delta is concerned, DTW-x-NRT-PVG-DTW, is equivalent to DTW-PVG-DTW, and is not allowed as a TWOV (after all, you can do an international connection at NRT and never enter Japan, so you would never have actually involved a third country).
#19
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#20
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Fair enough - it must be a bug in TIMATIC then.....
(If I put that trip into TIMATIC, the only way I can get the Chinese TWOV rules to show is to enter it as a trip from Japan to USA with a transit in China - the TWOV rules don't appear any other way for me.)
Ken.
(If I put that trip into TIMATIC, the only way I can get the Chinese TWOV rules to show is to enter it as a trip from Japan to USA with a transit in China - the TWOV rules don't appear any other way for me.)
Ken.
#21
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I suspect that if the routing order had been USA-PVG-NRT-USA that the Delta agents wouldn't have had this difficulty, but it really shouldn't be made the OP's problem.
Last edited by jiejie; Mar 15, 2015 at 2:53 pm
#22



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Obviously, this is too late now for OP.
About 12-18 months ago, at EVA counter, another passenger was having the same issue (CSR does not fully understand the TWOV rules). In that case, the itin was SFO-TPE-PVG-USA. The compromise I helped to broker was to get him to be checked in for SFO-TPE only and the passenger would sort it out in TPE.
If OP offered this solution to DL, would that have been accepted?
Also, it is amusing that they consulted a CBP guy. Why would CBP know any visa rules of any other country?
About 12-18 months ago, at EVA counter, another passenger was having the same issue (CSR does not fully understand the TWOV rules). In that case, the itin was SFO-TPE-PVG-USA. The compromise I helped to broker was to get him to be checked in for SFO-TPE only and the passenger would sort it out in TPE.
If OP offered this solution to DL, would that have been accepted?
Also, it is amusing that they consulted a CBP guy. Why would CBP know any visa rules of any other country?
#23


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China should ban Delta from flying to China till Delta understand how to read TIMATIC.. and slap a big fine to them.
By the way, have you complained to the DOT as well about it?
By the way, have you complained to the DOT as well about it?
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#25
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It all depends on the personnel at the original departure airport where the document check takes place.
IME some of the ground staff at US airports working for DL doesn't sound like they have been out of their own town, let alone state. They are nice people with limited knowledge.
IME some of the ground staff at US airports working for DL doesn't sound like they have been out of their own town, let alone state. They are nice people with limited knowledge.
#26
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This is 100% the fault of some combination of the Chinese Foreign Ministry and IATA (TIMATIC). The entire purpose of TIMATIC is to provide a quick & correct means for agents who are trained solely to operate the database and not as international lawyers, to determine whether an individual has the proper documents.
There is no reason for a DL agent to know that China considers a ticket to originate at NRT when the ticket in fact originates in the USA. Unless TIMATIC specifies that ticket origination is to be considered the immediately preceding station. As the language for TIMATIC is provided by respective government authorities, put into form and then reviewed for accuracy by government officials before it is posted, it falls on either China to have caught the missing language or IATA for not having included what China provided.
Snarky comments about China fining DL are way off base as are the comments about DL agents not knowing Chinese rules. They do, it's what China provided IATA and they see in front of them.
I would hope that DL makes this right for OP as a customer service gesture and also raises it to IATA as the language is incorrect.
There is no reason for a DL agent to know that China considers a ticket to originate at NRT when the ticket in fact originates in the USA. Unless TIMATIC specifies that ticket origination is to be considered the immediately preceding station. As the language for TIMATIC is provided by respective government authorities, put into form and then reviewed for accuracy by government officials before it is posted, it falls on either China to have caught the missing language or IATA for not having included what China provided.
Snarky comments about China fining DL are way off base as are the comments about DL agents not knowing Chinese rules. They do, it's what China provided IATA and they see in front of them.
I would hope that DL makes this right for OP as a customer service gesture and also raises it to IATA as the language is incorrect.
#27
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This is 100% the fault of some combination of the Chinese Foreign Ministry and IATA (TIMATIC). The entire purpose of TIMATIC is to provide a quick & correct means for agents who are trained solely to operate the database and not as international lawyers, to determine whether an individual has the proper documents.
There is no reason for a DL agent to know that China considers a ticket to originate at NRT when the ticket in fact originates in the USA. Unless TIMATIC specifies that ticket origination is to be considered the immediately preceding station. As the language for TIMATIC is provided by respective government authorities, put into form and then reviewed for accuracy by government officials before it is posted, it falls on either China to have caught the missing language or IATA for not having included what China provided.
Snarky comments about China fining DL are way off base as are the comments about DL agents not knowing Chinese rules. They do, it's what China provided IATA and they see in front of them.
I would hope that DL makes this right for OP as a customer service gesture and also raises it to IATA as the language is incorrect.
There is no reason for a DL agent to know that China considers a ticket to originate at NRT when the ticket in fact originates in the USA. Unless TIMATIC specifies that ticket origination is to be considered the immediately preceding station. As the language for TIMATIC is provided by respective government authorities, put into form and then reviewed for accuracy by government officials before it is posted, it falls on either China to have caught the missing language or IATA for not having included what China provided.
Snarky comments about China fining DL are way off base as are the comments about DL agents not knowing Chinese rules. They do, it's what China provided IATA and they see in front of them.
I would hope that DL makes this right for OP as a customer service gesture and also raises it to IATA as the language is incorrect.
Delta has been providing USA to China services via Japan since before TWOV was implemented in its various forms. 72-hour TWOV has now been around for over a year at PVG and there simply ISN'T ANY EXCUSE for Delta staff that deal with TPAC flights not to have enough training to know the TWOV rules by now, or at least to be able to have a human, designated DL international expert "on call" 24/7 that individual front-line staff members (or the customer) can refer back to for a ruling if they can't sort out TIMATIC.
No excuse for this to have happened.
#28
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Nobody at DL will get promoted for interpreting the written word in TIMATIC. Of course DL could have done a lot better here. In particular, as a TPAC carrier, it should, at a management / legal / compliance level carefully parse the language of TIMATIC, especially after a significant change such as TWOV.
That does not excuse the importance of clarifying all of this in TIMATIC and that rests with the Chinese government which must instruct IATA directly.
Remember, while this incident happened at an international gateway, documents are also checked at the point of origin. That could well be a domestic DLX-only station with a single agent who pulls up the same language.
That does not excuse the importance of clarifying all of this in TIMATIC and that rests with the Chinese government which must instruct IATA directly.
Remember, while this incident happened at an international gateway, documents are also checked at the point of origin. That could well be a domestic DLX-only station with a single agent who pulls up the same language.
#29
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Which is probably what Delta was going on.
#30
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