Wed Jul 26 14:19:47 PDT 2006

Southwest's Phantom "Purse Policy"

My outbound flight to Los Angeles the previous week was a genuinely unpleasant experience, with a few minor bright spots. It started with a rude Southwest Airlines ticket agent, who decided it was his job to redefine the airline's baggage policy to suit his own prejudices.
Him: How many bags are you checking?

Me: Just the one on the scale.

Him: [points at my carry-ons] You can't take those on the plane.

Me: Why not?

Him: You're only allowed one carry-on, plus maybe a purse.

Me: I'm allowed one 22-inch bag, one personal item, and my service dog's equipment, which is exempt. I've got one carry-on, one laptop, and my service dog's backpack. We're fine.

Him: Hmmmm. [turns back to terminal]

[several minutes pass]

Me: Excuse me, are we moving this process along?

Him: I'm reading the regulations on service dogs.

[several more minutes pass]

Him: Take your checked luggage over to x-ray.

Me: Thanks. By the way, can you find out how long the line is at security? I'd really like to take my service dog to the puppy park before the flight if we'll have enough time to get through the checkpoint.

Him: Go upstairs and see for yourself.

Me: Since the puppy park is over by baggage claim, which is the completely opposite direction from the gate, that wouldn't give me enough time to make the trip twice. Don't you have any way to check the line length, or perhaps you could contact the gate agent?

Him: [mumbles and turns away]
So, Mr. Rude had clearly decided that he had no legitimate way to interfere with me, but had simultaneously decided to be as unhelpful as possible. He also left me struggling with four bulky items and a service dog, without even asking if I needed help.

Luckily, the agent who'd been standing next to him noticed the problem, and very kindly offered to help me schlep the big piece of checked luggage over to x-ray. I thanked her profusely for her kindness, and hoped that this indicated my day would improve. Of course, my unbridled optimism was to be short-lived.

More to come...

Posted by Todd A. Jacobs | Permalink | Categories: Access Challenges