Yeah. But how do we identify the rogue employee? I can’t pick them from the rest.
lol, but seriously the agent id should be added to the PNR as a check in record.
Heck those SAAbre boarding passes AA give actually print the id on the BP so I presume all airline systems do the same thing.
Of course an agent id associated with check in processing may not actually be the same person who gave the advice but still, there should be an audit trail of sorts.
I tend to agree that QF would not want to directly admit to the mistake per se. That then calls into question issues of negligence and liability and all of that and the whole thing is very hard to prove and messy. But no I don't even pretend to be a lawyer in my own shower. A "goodwill gesture" would probably be the most that could be reasonably expected here.
although I suppose one can make the argument based upon what if the agent messed up the other way and did not, for example, verify a required visa or passport validity requirement and whatnot for travel - in these cases where entry requirements are not met due to operating carrier not verifying properly they face fines (and potentially having to transport the pax back) - that's the flip side of this argument really isn't it.
The problem really is that as far as the UK/Ireland etc are concerned everything was fine and thus QF had met their requirements for travel in this situation. Pax was told to get a PCR test which they went to do though was not required - it becomes a problem of doing too much rather than too little.
QF aside is this potentially something travel insurance might cover in some way? I know most of them opt out of covid related things, but I wonder if that could be covered somehow?