That is wild
@bmcc, and good luck. Given what I know about Qantas, I'm not surprised, but as a lawyer, I actually am.
Qantas is not unusual among companies in their decision not to empower frontline (and even escalation-level) staff to address concerns properly, and to be fair/realistic, there often is a lot of unreasonable "noise" that comes in at first instance. However, it's truly baffling that they're seemingly so arrogant, disorganised, and/or incompetent that they haven't managed to implement and/or successfully carry out a substantive escalations process for those staff to follow when certain keywords or phrases are used that suggest a customer appears to be acting reasonably and is aware, capable, and at high risk of taking formal action.
Mention the Australian Financial Complaints Authority when dealing with a bank or the Energy and Water Ombudsman when dealing with a utility company and you'll often find that even weeks of being stalemated against a brick wall will almost instantly yield immediate resolution directly from the provider. Of course, Qantas isn't in a similarly regulated industry, but it still blows my mind that competent references to, e.g., their Conditions of Carriage, the Australian Consumer Law, or competently and matter-of-factly threatening a small claims action or ACCC complaint doesn't appear to trigger even a hint of further review or scrutiny. Or worse, perhaps they've simply made the cynical business decision to wait it out and reactively address claims actually filed one-by-one based on internal data we don't have.
It's cost them my loyalty, but that's decidedly of no concern to them.