Who’s responsible for my missed connection?

Jeff Emerson missed his flight from Minneapolis to Washington last month. He didn’t make his connection to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and didn’t arrive as scheduled in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, where he was supposed to start work as a summer volunteer.

The story of Emerson’s delay is fascinating — maybe a little infuriating, too — for anyone who’s flying this summer, particularly internationally. It raises an important question about who takes responsibility for delays that are beyond a passenger’s control.

Emerson is a student at Luther College, a private school in Iowa. Through Orbitz, he’d booked a one-way ticket from Minneapolis to Tanzania via United Airlines and Ethiopian Airlines. The ticket was issued by Ethiopian, which means that it got the money from Orbitz and set the fare rules.

You can probably guess what happened next. A college student flying to Africa on a one-way ticket is bound to set off all kinds of alarms with the TSA. Sure enough, an agent pulled Emerson aside and questioned him, causing him to miss his flight. “Even though my passport is legitimate and my answers proved to be the truth, the agent could not remove me from a 24-hour no-fly list with the TSA,” Emerson says.

If you’re wondering about the 24-hour “no-fly” list, hold that thought.

Emerson tried to rebook his ticket for the next day, but United, the carrier on the Minneapolis-Washington leg of the trip, couldn’t help him, because it didn’t own the ticket. He needed to contact Ethio­pian. And that airline wouldn’t simply let him board the next flight for Addis Ababa. It wanted him to pay another $1,640 for a new ticket. He’d paid $1,082 for his original ticket.

That’s when Emerson contacted me. He’d already appealed to Orbitz for help, and it agreed to waive its $30 rebooking fee. He’d also spent days bouncing among Orbitz, United and Ethiopian, and he was becoming increasingly agitated. Why, he wondered, wouldn’t Ethiopian simply rebook him on the next flight?

I contacted Ethiopian, and it said it couldn’t do that. Actually, it needed him to buy a new ticket because of Ethiopia’s visa requirements, which state that inbound passengers must have a round-trip ticket. But it was willing to waive its $400 change fee, a representative said. Ethiopian’s position makes perfect sense from an airline’s perspective. After all, rebooking him at no cost would mean forfeiting the revenue it might get from a paying passenger on the same flight.

I asked Orbitz whether it could do anything. It circled back with Ethiopian and managed to negotiate a full refund on Emerson’s ticket. He rebooked his flight, paying about $200 more than his original fare.

Almost a full week after Emerson began his journey to Africa, he arrived in Tanzania. But he found the overall experience upsetting. Shouldn’t airlines be required to help a passenger who’s left behind because of a security delay? “I understand some of their reasoning — that the delays were not directly caused by their airline — and I know airlines don’t have to do something in every single case,” he says. “But I just don’t get it.”

A Department of Transportation spokesman says that technically, Ethiopian and United acted correctly. “Since the missed flight was not the carrier’s fault, DOT rules would not require the carrier to reschedule the passenger at no additional charge,” says Bill Mosley, a department spokesman.

The TSA doesn’t require airlines to help passengers who are held up. “Re-accommodation is between the airline and the passenger,” a spokesman told me. The TSA doesn’t compensate passengers who are delayed for security reasons, either. But for years, airlines have helped travelers by letting them take the next available flight. It appears that those informal agreements extend only to domestic airlines.

“I was an innocent victim of the TSA’s security measures,” Emerson says. “I also feel that I am entitled to some compensation for my loss of time, and the condescension I’ve had to deal with, largely on the part of Ethiopian Airlines.”

What about that 24-hour “no fly” list? A spokesman for the Terrorist Screening Center, a branch of the FBI that maintains the watch list of passengers who aren’t allowed to fly, told me that there is “no such thing” as a 24-hour “no fly” list. “If you’re on the list, you can’t fly — period,” he said.

But Emerson’s long journey to Africa raises a broader issue: For years, airlines have invoked “reasons beyond our control” as an excuse to deny passengers essentials such as a hotel room when a flight is held up because of weather, or a meal when air traffic control keeps a plane on the ground over lunch. Passengers are disappointed but generally understanding.

When the tables are turned, however, and passengers miss a flight for reasons beyond their control, airlines are reluctant or unwilling to be accommodating. It’s difficult to regulate an entire industry into seeing things from the customer’s perspective. But should that stop us from trying?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

    In fairness to the volunteer organization, that’s not unusual.  My church works with volunteer organizations globally, and they all have opportunities for volunteers of all ages, not just college students.  College students just have to advantage of a long summer vacations and youthful enthusiasm.

    If the organization is well run, it will provide all of the information that the kids need regarding visa, vaccination shorts, etc.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

    Well, for one he was going to Tanzania, not Ethiopia.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

    Requiring round trip tickets is not unique to TSA.  For example, some car rental places will allow you to use a visa/mc debit card only if you present proof of a round trip ticket.

  • adg479

    How does a college student pay for round trip airfare from Minneapolis to Tanzania on a “volunteer” salary?  Maybe TSA did this kid a favor…he can now attempt to find a serious job for the summer that might actually advance his career after college.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/5CI3K5KXUU5EBF5AYPSR7ZNERY Helio

    I’m Brazilian, and to travel to USA, I need to have a visa.  I traveled to your country several times during the last decade, via several airlines (UA, AA, JAL, TAM, Continental, etc), and I don’t rememeber seeing a remark or note advising about visa requirements.  It may be in the fine printing, but I really don’t remember.

    But I believe that the passenger is the ultime responsible for his trip.  He needs to double check himself everything.  In this case, I cannot believe this guy doesn’t know how to use internet to look for information.  It seems he was very efficient to find Chris and ask for help.  He could save these problems if he had done some (even a lot) research earlier.

    I don’t know… maybe because I need to do a lot of research to make sure I won’t have any problem with my “TSA” or my destination “TSA”, I never had this kind of problems.  In my last trip, I traveled with my IRS/income report, to make sure I won’t have problems with Spain customs.  An example of a kind of problems I belive americans will never face.

  • ChrisFromSFO

    ADG, why do we care? As far as I can tell, he did not ask for any special consideration because he was volunteering… Which is a nice break from all the people who ask for a special break because they scheduled chemotherapy for a cancer they already knew about, wanted to be with their dog weeks after his surgery, visiting their aunt’s best friend’s daughter-in-law, etc. More kids should be doing what this one did (although they should also work with a real travel agent before booking tickets to Africa).

  • ClareClare

    I don’t know why we’re going in circles here about Orbitz Ethiopian United.  The OP apparently showed up for his flight on time and everything was in order–and then got screwed by the thugs at TSA, who invented an imaginary rule that caused all this mess!

    How is this NOT 100% the TSA’s fault?  Who the **** told this poor kid about the non-existent 24-hour list?!  THAT’s the issue, pure and simple!

    In the meantime, I’m shocked at how well Orbitz resolved this–as best they could–by working with Ethiopian.  I would’ve assumed that they would leave the poor guy high and dry.  Must have been some unusual planetary alignment that day or something.

    If he’s game, maybe he should sue the TSA for the $200 differential he had to pay, out of principle.  I know, I know, the TSA will haughtily claim that they are exempt from all liability.  BUT the specific issue here is that the OP was given absolutely, blatantly FALSE information by some TSA jerk and suffered directly because of it.  Let’s hear Fuhrer Pistole tell us in writing that “TSA procedures were followed correctly here.”  Ya think? 

  • TonyA_says

    A damn good reason to use a damn good Travel Agent
    Ok, enough of these travel vending machine malfunctions.
    It’s time to get smart about these things.

    Let’s assume the OP is an American citizen and will travel MSP-IAD-ADD-JRO one way. Here is what a good travel agent does. S/he uses timatic and pulls the Visa (or Health) information.

    VISA TRANSIT ETHIOPIA (ET)
    …… NORMAL PASSPORTS ONLY ……
    TWOV (TRANSIT WITHOUT VISA):
    VISA REQUIRED, EXCEPT FOR HOLDERS OF ONWARD TICKETS FOR A MAX.
    TRANSIT >TIRULES/R32 TIME OF 12 HOURS.
    VISA ISSUANCE:
    VD/0
    VISA REQUIRED, EXCEPT FOR A TRANSIT VISA CAN BE OBTAINED ON
    ARRIVAL IF TRANSIT EXCEEDS 12 HOURS.
    FEE: USD 20.- (SINGLE TRANSIT) OR USD 30.- (DOUBLE TRANSIT).
    (SEE NOTE 32358)
    NOTE 32358: NOT APPLICABLE TO THOSE BEING OF ERITREAN OR
    SOMALIAN ORIGIN.
    VISA DESTINATION TANZANIA (TZ)
    …… NORMAL PASSPORTS ONLY ……
    PASSPORT REQUIRED.
    - PASSPORT AND/OR PASSPORT REPLACING DOCUMENTS MUST BE VALID
    VD/0
    AT LEAST 6 MONTHS ON ARRIVAL.
    VISA ISSUANCE:
    VISA REQUIRED, EXCEPT FOR NATIONALS OF USA CAN OBTAIN A VISA
    ON ARRIVAL, PROVIDED HOLDING TRAVEL DOCUMENTS VALID FOR AT
    LEAST ONE MONTH BEYOND PERIOD OF INTENDED STAY. FEE: BETWEEN
    USD 50.- AND USD 200.-.
    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
    - VISITORS ARE REQUIRED TO HOLD DOCUMENTS REQUIRED FOR THEIR
    NEXT DESTINATION.
    WARNING:
    - PASSPORTS AND PASSPORT REPLACING DOCUMENTS OF ALL VISITORS
    VD/1
    MUST CONTAIN AT LEAST 1 UNUSED VISA PAGE
    >TIDFT/TZ/PA/WA/ID45847
    - VISITORS NOT HOLDING RETURN/ONWARD TICKETS COULD BE REFUSED
    ENTRY.

    Well the OP did not have an onward ticket (beyond Tanzania). Sorry.

  • TonyA_says

     Did you bother to check United’s one-way fare and compare it to ET’s ??? I am sure you did not. Why do you think it will make a difference if Tanzania requires VISITORs to have a return or onward ticket? Here are the one-way fares from MSP to JRO. Now you know why he chose ET.

    **  MONEYSAVER  FARES  ** LOADED 23JUN 16:31EDT/23JUN 20:31GMT
    MSPJRO NLX FARES FOR TRVL 23JUN12 AND TKTG 23JUN              
     EDITS USED  SNS/BLKOUT/DAY/AP/EFF FOR 23JUN DPTR             
      ADD TAXES                                                   
              * TICKETING FEE MAY APPLY – SEE >INFO TKTFEE (      
              * SEG/PFC CHARGES MAY APPLY                         
     LN A/L  F.B.C.  USD   OW       RT    EFF     LTK   AP MIN/MAX
      1 ET   BOWUS      999.00          23MAY12    -     -  – / - 
      2 ET   SOWUS     1199.00          23MAY12    -     -  – / - 
      3 ET   YOWUS     1250.00  2500.00 23MAY12    -     -  – / - 
      4 US   Y         3621.00  7242.00  1APR08    -     -  – /12M
      5 LH   Y1        3765.00  7530.00 19JAN12    -     -  – /12M
      6 UA   Y1        3765.00  7530.00 19JAN12    -     -  – /12M

    Lowest base fare for United is $3765 plus tax. Compare that to ET’s $999 plus tax.

  • TonyA_says

    I respectfully disagree with you.
    Knowing what this kid was up to (staying a long time in Africa), I would have recommended he bought a FULLY UNRESTRICTED one-way ticket OUT OF Africa to a European city that welcomes AMERICANS. Amsterdam offers a non-stop solution but it will cost $1769.90. However, that is fully refundable so you can get your money back later. Frankfurt also has one at $1489 but with a stop at ADD.
    I know how this works since I have [US citizen] customers who need the same kind of tickets for other countries.
    They need PROOF of onward or outbound ticket so they simply buy a Y class one-way outbound from that country to anywhere Americans are fully welcomed.

  • Joe Farrell

    but its not up to the TSA to enforce Ehtiopias visa rules.  . .

  • Joe Farrell

    Why does TSA care about people LEAVING the country for any destination?  If you are leaving you are not a threat- check the guy for weapons and bombs and send him on his way. . . .

  • Joe Farrell

    Terrorists don’t fly first class. either  . . 

  • mikegun

    Therein lies the difference between how I deal with the TSA. I never “lip off”. In this case I explained the problem to the supervisor before she could and never was put in a defensive mode, hence a good offense is your best defense…and I knew I was being fed a load of BS so knowing the rules helps as well.

  • crash025

    Y tickets aren’t always refundable without a change fee. Trust me on that. Leftouthansa will screw you over on that.

  • TonyA_says

    we do the same for most non-american citizens or residents.

  • TonyA_says

    true but the one i’m quoting is cancellable or changeable without a fee. it is not fully refundable but at least you can exchange it for a ticket home later. fully refundable are almost a thing of the past.

  • TonyA_says

    The airline could be fined by Tanzania for transporting a pax with insufficient paperwork.

  • SoBeSparky

    Yes, true, and that is the point.  We have several sources based on many experiences versus one person who “knows” it is random based on his singular experience.

  • SoBeSparky

    That is your take.  Another take, commonly noted in these comments, is that we have a neophyte international traveler who used the internet for tickets and apparently received no honest and reality-based warnings and advice about buying one-way international tickets.  He should have appeared at the airport three hours beforehand (airline recommendation).  He should have had all his back-up paperwork in order.  

    It is a dangerous world out there.  Getting on an international flight to a remote location is not similar to heading to the 7-11 for Coke. Real, live, local travel agents make a living helping customers like this.  (I am not and never have been a travel agent, nor do I even know one anymore.)  

  • SoBeSparky

    How fleeting are our memories.  Almost 50 years ago, the beginnings of common airline hijackings were flights to take passengers to a unscheduled foreign country.  ”Take me to Cuba” was the common request.

    Remember, the passengers on 9/11 had their planes hijacked.  It did not matter what the planes’ destinations.  We should care anytime a plane goes up in the skies.  Gravity rules.

  • mikegun

    Yes…but I was replying to Wayne Denton who seems to indicate that a one way fare is deceitful. If your situation allows for a one way, you can buy it and travel on it…that is why they are published.

  • AUSSIEtraveller

    TSA-what a joke.

    Another one of their stuff ups.

    The biggest problem in the USA is that mob called government !!!

  • mikegun

    For US Citizens? Mexico, Canada, UK all allow for one way travel as evidenced in Timatic by the lack of the requirement that onward/return travel is required. I believe most airlines use a version of Timatic, in fact Delta publishes their’s for customer use here: 
    http://www.delta.com/planning_reservations/plan_flight/international_travel_information/visa_passport_information/index.jsp

  • Daizymae

    Yet another example of TSA’s lies and abuse of American citizens.

  • MarkKelling

    Many countries also require you have a return ticket before they let you in.  I don’t know about this specific situation so I can’t state specifically it is required, and if it was how was the original ticket purchased?  

    And the TSA doesn’t know if your ticket is round trip or one way anyway when you pass through security and I have never seen the name checker sitting there with a no-fly list when checking my boarding pass.  Something seems to be left out of the story.

  • MarkKelling

    Fully refundable is impossible to get on UA these days.  Surprised me to no end when I bought a full fare 1st ticket DEN SFO and it stated “non refundable.”  So what’s the use with full fare tickets anymore?

  • LisaSimmeone

     One way to the third world.  If that doesn’t hit you with a note of despair then you’re truly brain dead.  Then again I’ve flushed a whole career down the shitter by criticizing the TSA so I’m not one to talk.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

     Good point

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

     He’s a student, I suspect that he didn’t have the money to have $1400-$1800 just laying in the form of a ticket.

    Q: Does Tanzania require proof of return ticket and can it be in the form of two one ways or must it be a single PNR

  • TonyA_says

    Interesting. The endorsement should state REFUNDABLE according to the fare rules of Y fare for Den-Sfo on UA.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

    Parents, working during the year, savings…

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OEPJGQPIEB75YYDE5CJY6R3VFE Carver Clark Farrow II

    Is the  relevant portion the last line about return/onward tickets?  I’d be curious about the use of the word “could”  does that mean that there are times when extry is possible?

  • mikegun

    The 9/11 ones did.

  • TonyA_says

    any onward tkt is fine. doesn’t need to be one pnr.

  • TonyA_says

    sometimes they don’t check.-:

  • mikegun

    Right, I had that in my earlier post at one point, but I may have edited it out for space. The airline is responsible, so the United “agent” in MSP should have alerted the poster to the visa problem at check in. (As TonyA points out the Tanzania rules come into play as well.) I am also confused where TSA comes into play.Which agent is being referred to? Is it possible the facts have become muddled? Everyone seems to agree the OP is an inexperienced traveler.

    BTW, this particular response is to those that wonder why he can buy a one way ticket on orbitz.

  • mikegun

    But, if they do, and then deny entry…the airline is responsible for the return journey.

  • TonyA_says

    plus fine

  • MarkKelling

    Not Y (coach). A (first) class.  

    I was surprised because F & A class have always been with no restrictions.  My A said “non-refundable changes allowed at any time.”

    I look closer now before purchasing.

  • mikegun

    Not if he booked on their website, it doesn’t know if you are eligible to travel in to Tanzania on a one way ticket or not. That is the responsibility of the traveler to research before purchase. 

  • Sadie_Cee

    Thanks for the hint re Timatic.  I read it carefully but while passports, visas and customs requirements were mentioned, there was nothing about ticketing per se.  Even with your example elsewhere on this blog, your friend with a Dominican passport was entering the D.R. with a one-way ticket.  He had citizenship rights.  He was not a tourist.  I still don’t have examples of countries that admit tourists without a return ticket.  I will keep looking.

  • MeanMeosh

    Yes, Tony, and this is great information – but the story indicates that Ethiopian Airlines flagged him for a problem with an ETHIOPIAN visa, not a TANZANIAN visa.  It appears he may well have had a problem there, but what really confuses me is Ethiopian claiming he needed a round-trip ticket to enter Ethiopia on a transit visa.  He had an onward ticket to Tanzania, which seems to meet the requirements for one. 

    So somewhere in this story, there is a misunderstanding.  Either the OP misunderstood that his problem was with Tanzania and not Ethiopia, or Ethiopian Airlines provided misinformation (perhaps they didn’t fully understand the itinerary) that he couldn’t travel to Addis without a return ticket (when he did in fact have an onwards ticket).

  • MeanMeosh

    I am also not 100% convinced that the TSA really DID tell him he was on a bogus “24 hour no fly list”.  Like I said, I wouldn’t put it past a jerk agent to mess with him like that, but I find it more likely he was confused and misunderstood the real reason, which was that the counter agent denied him boarding because he had a problem with his documents to enter Tanzania.

    If the TSA really did make up a BS reason like that, though – then yes, they absolutely should have to pay up (good luck getting them to do so, though).

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/JWIDK73REHGADBHYLCUC3FBV7Y Bob

    fwiw, if you check in online you pretty much never get SSSS, and if you do, you can just edit it out of your boarding pass before printing.

  • mikegun

    Compare the requirements of Mexico to those of the Bahamas, for example. You will see that the Bahamas has a statement that it does require proof of return/onward travel. Since it is not included in Mexico’s, one way travel is allowed. 

    This would make sense, since it is entirely possible to fly into Mexico, take a bus to a border city, and walk back into the US.

    The DR example was in response to someone who believed airlines were being deceitful in allowing a one way ticket to be sold. The example I gave in my response was to indicate that there are certainly examples of when a one-way international fare could be applied. Yes, the DR passport holder does not need a RT ticket, so that is one example where that fare could be utilized.

  • TonyA_says

    The vending machine can easily prevent this. They need to add 2 checks and warnings -
    1. If you TRANSIT a country that requires a Visa then you should be warned.
    2. If you VISIT a country that requires an onward or return ticket you should be warned.
    The warning can be as simple as a pop up window with a generic message. It does not have check the pax mationality or residency.

  • mikegun

    I know JetBlue has this feature. Go to their website and try to book a one way internationally. (I chose JFK-SDQ) You get a message that says warns you that proof of a return ticket may be required. (Actually, return or “onward” travel is more correct, but still better than nothing.)

    You’re right, if JetBlue can do it, the OTA’s can add the coding.

  • Joe Farrell

    What about when an airline shuffles its airplanes around – taking an airplane that is on-time and uses that airplane to fly another flight – and shifting its delays to the last flights of the delays to the west coast . . . 

    is weather the reason for that delay?  Or is it for the airlines convenience – even though someone would have gotten a weather delay but not you until the airline decided to take your on-time airplane scheduled to fly your route and shift it another flight?  Thereby creating a delay on your flight that did not otherwise exist.  

    Is that a weather delay for you? 

  • Joe Farrell

    how is this relevant to my reply?  I thought I said check him for bombs and weapons . . ..