Decreasing the risk of lost luggage
When I travel with my husband, Dave, there’s one thing
I never have to worry about: luggage tags. These are the ones with the bar
codes that are applied at the airport when we check our bags. As soon as Dave
lifts the bags off the carousel, he tears the tags off and drops them in the
nearest wastebasket, sometimes while we’re on the move to get to the shuttle.
But
many times I travel solo, or with friends or colleagues, so I have to handle my
own tags. I almost always take just one bag, and I’m pretty good at removing
the tag at the airport, but sometimes I’m focused on getting home to the point
where I don’t notice the tag till I lift the bag out of my car, like the other
night when I returned from Mexico. But Dave was right there to take care of
that pesky tag for me.
I’ve
yet to go to the airport with an old luggage tag still in place, but it happens
to other folks, perhaps more often than we’d think, and the old tags could
cause a problem for your new trip, especially if you’re taking a different
airline.
Making
it especially important is this: we’re not necessarily talking about the long
tags that are wrapped around your bag’s handle. There’s that little bar code
tag that is slapped onto your bag, and that can cause a problem. USA Today reports
that a TikTok video, posted by someone who appears to be an airport employee at
Ontario International in California, warning travelers to make sure that little
sticker is not on your bag when you check in for your next flight. If it’s
still there, the scanning computer could see the old one, rather than the new
one, and send your bag to the wrong destination. (The video, posted August 22,
had garnered nearly half a million views inside of a month.)
The
chances of a stray old tag causing such a problem are slim, but they’re not
zero. Leaving old tags on your bag is
only going to increase the odds in favor of a problem. Most mix-ups involving
luggage occur during connections. Checked bags are moved from one plane to the
next very quickly, and most of the time it works well, but only if the system’s
computer scanners pick up the bar code and send it to the right location for
transport to the next plane.
There
is not a universally used luggage-handling system, but all of them use
computers, scanners, conveyor belts and tilt-tables to get the job done. Think
of an old-fashioned pinball machine, with various doors and levers routing the
ball here and there. Now, think of the ball being encoded and sent on a
deliberate route through the maze so that it drops into a pre-determined hole.
All of this is happening very quickly, too. There’s not much margin for error,
and if a bag winds up somewhere it’s not supposed to be, it’s almost always the
fault of the bar code. Not that the code itself is corrupted, but it’s simply the
wrong code, and that’s usually because it’s the old sticker.
But
bags to get lost, in spite of the best efforts of travelers to make sure old
bar codes are long gone and airport personnel doing their best to route the
bags properly. Staffing shortages and high travel demand have caused some
issues since the pandemic. The problems are said to be significantly worse in
Europe, for unknown reasons.
What
to do if your bag is lost? Some travelers keep detailed lists of what they pack
in a checked bag, especially if there’s anything of real value. We always
recommend to our clients that they keep really valuable items, like jewelry, on
their person or at least in their carry-on bags. But these days, making a list
on your phone isn’t that hard, and you can also add photos of particular items.
It’s also a good idea to have a photo of your bag, and a description.
If
your bag doesn’t show up at your destination, don’t leave the airport. Go
directly to the luggage counter and give them a detailed description of the
bag, including the photo. By law, airlines must compensate passengers for
“reasonable, verifiable and actual incidental expenses that may incur” due to a
delay in getting one’s bags. The maximum liability limit for domestic flights
is $3800. If the airline can’t find your bag, they must compensate you for its contents
within liability limits. Airlines provide their lost-luggage policy in advance
of a trip, too.
How
often does this happen? The Department of Transportation issues a monthly Air
Travel Consumer Report, and the most recent says that in July 2023, only ¾ of
one percent of bags were mishandled by U.S. airlines. That doesn’t sound like
much, but it translates into 339,618 bags (out of over 45 million). The airline
with the best record is Allegiant Air, with 0.16%, and at the bottom of the
list is United (1.07%). Delta, the carrier used most often by our clients, was
sixth overall at 0.63%. Compared to July 22, for virtually the same number of
total bags handled, the mishandled rate increased by about 60,000 bags.
The
odds of our bags arriving with our flight are heavily in our favor, but there
are things we can do to increase the odds, like removing that pesky barcode
when we bring our bag home. We’ll help you with little tips like this, and lots
more. Give us a call!
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