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04-26-2018 08:09 PM
I have a feeling there’s...more to this story:
(Nathan Saliagas is the son)
04-26-2018 08:27 PM
@Junebug54 wrote:Do you seriously believe that a Delta official would tell someone to shut the f.... up?
I know right? Especially when they were in Amsterdam.
04-27-2018 10:18 AM
@qbetzforreal wrote:
@Junebug54 wrote:Do you seriously believe that a Delta official would tell someone to shut the f.... up?
I know right? Especially when they were in Amsterdam.
No, I don't. And the wheelchair attendants were NOT Delta employees. They aren't in the US either. They work for a company that contracts with the various airports & airlines to provide the service. On any given day, the same attendant could be helping passengers on multiple airlines.
04-27-2018 11:34 AM
So all this has NOTHING to do with Delta?
If all the angst is from an airport vendor servicing various airlines,
Delta really waaaay above/beyond to rectify the issue.
Delta should be applauded, yes?
04-27-2018 12:03 PM
@sidsmom wrote:So all this has NOTHING to do with Delta?
If all the angst is from an airport vendor servicing various airlines,
Delta really waaaay above/beyond to rectify the issue.
Delta should be applauded, yes?
Not quite nothing, but close to it. When a passenger needing assistance books their tickets, they request whatever they need through the airline. The airline notifies the contractor, and it's the contractor who provides the service.
04-27-2018 12:29 PM
@FrostyBabe1 wrote:
@sidsmom wrote:So all this has NOTHING to do with Delta?
If all the angst is from an airport vendor servicing various airlines,
Delta really waaaay above/beyond to rectify the issue.
Delta should be applauded, yes?
Not quite nothing, but close to it. When a passenger needing assistance books their tickets, they request whatever they need through the airline. The airline notifies the contractor, and it's the contractor who provides the service.
While I agree this situation may have been blown out of proportion, I do not think Delta is off the hook. If Delta - or any other airline - has no control over contractors who are responsible for meeting the agreed to requirements, customers should be so informed.
As in - yes I understand you will need a wheelchair, and we agree that it should be provided, but we have absolutely no control over the contractors responsible for that so it's definitely a crapshoot as to whether one will be there when you need it.
That would definitely begin to prompt customer action.
04-27-2018 12:46 PM
This situation is further complicated by the fact that this happened at the Amsterdam airport. In compliance with European Ruling 1107/2006, it's the responsibility of the airport to provide the service/oversee the contractor, not the airline. I agree that this woman had an awful experience, but I doubt that we know the full extent of what really happened.
04-27-2018 12:53 PM
So who IS the Airport-Contracted Wheelchair Vendor?
04-27-2018 12:59 PM - edited 04-27-2018 01:02 PM
@sidsmom wrote:So who IS the Airport-Contracted Wheelchair Vendor?
https://www.schiphol.nl/en/page/quality-standards/
It doesn't specifically say. It just says they're employed by the airport. It does give a timeframe for resolution of complaints.
04-27-2018 03:49 PM
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