AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
IMHO that should be SOP, would learn the stragglers quick smart.Anyway, as soon as it became evident that there were no shows, he'd start the process of pulling their bags, and would simultaneously have the cabin door closed. If, looking out the window, he saw someone running through the lounge, he'd call down and the door would be opened. But, if they were carrying duty free, and especially if not in a hurry, the door would say closed, and he'd wait for the bags to be removed.
Back in my early days with the airline, and I was flying with a very no nonsense Captain. He hated people who intentionally held up the aircraft, as they visited duty free, in the knowledge that as their bags were on board, they could afford to be late. You know who you are, and they are not uncommon.
Anyway, as soon as it became evident that there were no shows, he'd start the process of pulling their bags, and would simultaneously have the cabin door closed. If, looking out the window, he saw someone running through the lounge, he'd call down and the door would be opened. But, if they were carrying duty free, and especially if not in a hurry, the door would say closed, and he'd wait for the bags to be removed.
The difference in those scenarios is that the passenger is not choosing to avoid flying with their luggage. It is the cases where the passenger is potentially electing to not be on the flight their luggage is on that are the concern. If the passenger was expecting it to be on their flight, then presumably they have no nefarious intent.Its not like there arent many cases when bags are misrouted or dont get loaded on a tight connection and are then flown on a separate later flights without their owners all the time.
There's an element of systemic redundancy as well- one process fails another one addresses the risk, or part of.The difference in those scenarios is that the passenger is not choosing to avoid flying with their luggage. It is the cases where the passenger is potentially electing to not be on the flight their luggage is on that are the concern. If the passenger was expecting it to be on their flight, then presumably they have no nefarious intent.
The difference in those scenarios is that the passenger is not choosing to avoid flying with their luggage. It is the cases where the passenger is potentially electing to not be on the flight their luggage is on that are the concern. If the passenger was expecting it to be on their flight, then presumably they have no nefarious intent.
I think that’s right… multiple safeguards. A passenger not showing up after they have checked bags should be a flag for risk.There's an element of systemic redundancy as well- one process fails another one addresses the risk, or part of.
Stricter procedures? There's grumbles about the procedures now about whether this or that is needed/ waste of time and effort etc ( right or wing I don't know). Stricter ones would be a hard sell to Joe Public I reckon.
Thinking that they were departing at 1700 hours? I’d suspect the booze alternative.Maybe the pax was one of those people who saw 15xx and had 5pm in their mind
That sorta happened to me in the MEL MH Lounge years ago except the staff woke me and sent me to the gate.Here's an example - someone a know fell asleep in the KF lounge in SIN waiting for the midnight fight to SYD (after a very busy week at work). She did not hear her name being paged BUT she was pretty much the last person in the lounge and SQ should have known she was in the lounge as they check (scan?) your boarding pass on entry. (And NO, alcohol was not a factor). When she woke up and realised she had missed the flight the SQ staff were very synthetic - let her sleep overnight in the lounge and put her on the first flight in the morning. I always wondered why the lounge staff did not at least look around the lounge ....
… I always wondered why the lounge staff did not at least look around the lounge ....