Zips-Numerate-Viscosity
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- Feb 20, 2023
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If you're ever forced to speak to anyone when you check in or bag drop with Qantas, beware - they seem to be policing their carry-on rules a lot more. I'll let you decide whether the lesson here is to follow their carry-on rules more stringently or to avoid talking to Qantas staff wherever possible during the flying process.
I flew domestic J yesterday, and I didn't have a smartphone, so I went to the check-in desk to print a boarding pass. After being gazumped by two non-priority passengers in being served at the desk (...), I politely asked the Qantas staff member for a boarding pass, showing them my ID. They gave it to me, and I turned and walked towards the security gate.
They subsequently surprised me by calling out my name, and said I wouldn't be able to take what I was carrying as carry-on. I was carrying a small backpack, a suit bag, and two small shopping bags with dirty clothing and various possessions - technically four bags. I said that I could put one bag inside another, and he said that I'd still have three bags and would need to check one in. Not wanting to make a scene, I just turned around and walked away, knowing they couldn't do anything at the gate if I followed Qantas's rules to the letter. They called out my name, and I ignored them.
After going through the security gate, I was bemused - but not entirely surprised - to hear over the airport loudspeaker that Qantas were paging me by name, asking me to go to a service desk. I got some food with my friends, rearranged my possessions into two bags, and subsequently approached a different service desk (closer to the food court), who had no idea why I was paged. Immediately after talking to them, I was paged again over the loudspeaker, this time to the boarding gate (30 minutes before boarding). I went there without my carry-on, leaving it with my friends. The staff at the gate said they had been told that I had four bags, and needed to see my carry-on luggage. I said I didn't have it, and politely but firmly said that I knew what the carry-on rules were, quoting them. They let me go.
What a waste of time - they have no business checking my carry-on or making sure that I'm compliant with the rules before I fly - only when I'm at the gate and about to get on the plane! Sure, I shouldn't have walked away from the check-in desk employee while they were talking to me, but I shouldn't need to demonstrate at the check-in desk that my carry-on bags meet the requirements. After all, they can't prove I'm going to take everything that I'm carrying at that point on the plane. I'm happy to suffer the consequences at the boarding gate, of course. (But if I wanted all my bags weighed and measured, I'd fly Jetstar!)
Thankfully, no-one questioned me when I went on the plane, and my J flight was lovely. But I won't be flying with Qantas again for a while, unless I'm forced to for work (lowest corporate price policy).
Related: what's the likelihood of me being flagged as a high-risk passenger with Qantas now - identified by QFF number - where they're going to be super-stringent with carry-on rules with me?
I flew domestic J yesterday, and I didn't have a smartphone, so I went to the check-in desk to print a boarding pass. After being gazumped by two non-priority passengers in being served at the desk (...), I politely asked the Qantas staff member for a boarding pass, showing them my ID. They gave it to me, and I turned and walked towards the security gate.
They subsequently surprised me by calling out my name, and said I wouldn't be able to take what I was carrying as carry-on. I was carrying a small backpack, a suit bag, and two small shopping bags with dirty clothing and various possessions - technically four bags. I said that I could put one bag inside another, and he said that I'd still have three bags and would need to check one in. Not wanting to make a scene, I just turned around and walked away, knowing they couldn't do anything at the gate if I followed Qantas's rules to the letter. They called out my name, and I ignored them.
After going through the security gate, I was bemused - but not entirely surprised - to hear over the airport loudspeaker that Qantas were paging me by name, asking me to go to a service desk. I got some food with my friends, rearranged my possessions into two bags, and subsequently approached a different service desk (closer to the food court), who had no idea why I was paged. Immediately after talking to them, I was paged again over the loudspeaker, this time to the boarding gate (30 minutes before boarding). I went there without my carry-on, leaving it with my friends. The staff at the gate said they had been told that I had four bags, and needed to see my carry-on luggage. I said I didn't have it, and politely but firmly said that I knew what the carry-on rules were, quoting them. They let me go.
What a waste of time - they have no business checking my carry-on or making sure that I'm compliant with the rules before I fly - only when I'm at the gate and about to get on the plane! Sure, I shouldn't have walked away from the check-in desk employee while they were talking to me, but I shouldn't need to demonstrate at the check-in desk that my carry-on bags meet the requirements. After all, they can't prove I'm going to take everything that I'm carrying at that point on the plane. I'm happy to suffer the consequences at the boarding gate, of course. (But if I wanted all my bags weighed and measured, I'd fly Jetstar!)
Thankfully, no-one questioned me when I went on the plane, and my J flight was lovely. But I won't be flying with Qantas again for a while, unless I'm forced to for work (lowest corporate price policy).
Related: what's the likelihood of me being flagged as a high-risk passenger with Qantas now - identified by QFF number - where they're going to be super-stringent with carry-on rules with me?
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