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Continental Offers Free Flights, Frequent-Flyer Status To Misrouted Child's Family

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Continental Airlines has made a much more generous offer to the family whose ten-year-old daughter was accidentally flown to Newark instead of Cleveland while flying as an unaccompanied minor. Paterfamilias and blogger Jonathan Kamens wrote that a Continental rep "assured [him] again that the airline takes what happened very seriously." The details of Continental's offer, inside.

[The rep] said that Continental is going to refund my daughter's entire fare and fly her back to Boston in first class for free. They are also going to refund the round-trip tickets that my in-laws bought to fly to Boston with Miriam and then back to Cleveland, and replace them with first-class tickets as well (note: they had already planned this trip before what happened on Sunday). Finally, they are giving my wife, my daughter and I "Silver Elite" status in their frequent-flyer program, OnePass, until the end of the current program year, which apparently is next February.

Is this enough? Will Continental, the regional carrier, and the airport investigate what happened and make sure it never happens again?

Offer from Continental [Something better to do]

PREVIOUSLY: Continental Puts 10-Year-Old Child On The Wrong Plane

(Photo: jenkardux)

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Trey Mahaffey
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the investigation will be "taken very seriously"

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I think their compensation is reasonable.

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I'd say even if they DO investigate, the chances of it happening again are rare. I mean, I don't know the figures, but I am guessing the amount of times things like this happen are rare. In no system can you ever make it 100% possible nothing will fail/go wrong. I mean, we had a horse come off a trailer, and within one minute of getting into a stall, put his foot through a stall gate and get wedged. Luckily my neighbor had a pair of Linesmans Pliers and cut through the gate enough to release the horses foot. We have since then kept a pair of bolt cutters in both barns, but as I have said, even after I bought and installed them of my own initiative, the chances of it happening a second time are remote.

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She doesn't get to visit the pilots and get a jr pilot wings pin? This is NOT ENOUGH.

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Nope, not enough. Continental has already failed if this is the NEW response after taking a small beating in the "court of public opinion" after their initial response.

You should not have had to be embarrassed in to your more recent resolution continental.

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I don't think that's nearly enough, but I don't know what exactly WOULD be though. When I was 16 with 105 degree fever flying into LAX from New Zealand coming back from an exchange program, United was supposed to hand walk me to the next gate for my connecting flight and instead I wandered around LAX for a couple of hours until I passed out and woke up on a couch in the back of a United break room. I didn't get squat.

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So... I can put down my torch now? Maybe on the Continental kiosk?

Seriously, this seems a very good gesture on Continental's part. Not to mention they nipped it in the bud before it became an impossibly huge PR gaffe. (Not that it wasn't already a huge gaffe, but doing nothing or doing something insufficient would have just made it worse)

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They are going above and beyond. The girl was safely cared for in the first place even though she was mis-routed. So safety wasn't too much of an issue. Throwing in the in-laws tickets as well as the frequent flyer status is a bonus.


At least in my book, but I don't have children, so can't compare there.

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@Skeetz: They won't even ask her if she likes movies about gladiators.

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Investigation seems so unnecessary. Stuff like this is a mistake; they happen in any industry. An investigation would only waste the taxpayers' money and tarnish the reputation of a company which appears to be doing everything within its power, short of lifetime free flights, to rectify its mistake.

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I would say this is about as good as can be expected. Problems come up and while it is a shame that this was an issue and shouldn't happened, this is a reasonable response to it. In some peoples opinions there will not be anything that would be enough. I personally think this is adequate.

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@socalrob: I imagine it's probably pretty scary when you put your child on a flight, when she is suppposed to arrive you call the people picking her up, who then respond, "she never got here"...

Scary stuffs. Imagine what they could have been thinking, did someone take her?

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I don't personally care for Continental, but sounds like they're responding in a reasonable manner. Sure, they should try to investigate what went wrong and fix it, but mistakes do happen. Once a mistake happens, the best you can do is try to fix it, make up for it, and prevent it in the future.

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'tis a pity that only public outcry can get these corporations to care about customer service.

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@axiomatic: What would be your resolution?

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@HiPwr: They should have offered this new resolution the first time.

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@John Henschen: I guess they didn't know about your issue when they responded to this lost child incident.

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I'm completely failing to understand the total freakout about this incident. The kid should have gone from Boston to Cleveland. Instead the kid goes to Newark. Continental probably has a half-dozen BOS-CLE flights each day--just get the kid on the the next one.

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@axiomatic: That's not a viable resolution. They don't have a time machine, so what do you suggest would be a reasonable response NOW?

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@axiomatic: This only happened yesterday. I don't think this is a "new resolution," it's just the actual response finally swinging into gear.

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@bilge: You've paid a babysitter to take care of your child. You call the babysitter. The babysitter doesn't have the child and doesn't know where the kid is. I think that's a legitimate cause for a freakout.

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@bilge: I guess you are not a parent, aunt, uncle or grandparent?

It's extremely panicking to not know where your child is. For the hours that Continental didn't realize there was a problem, NO ONE knew where this child was and there was no guarantee that she was safe or even supervised.

Also, it's tough enough for a child to entertain themselves and behave for a short flight. Spending probably 6 hours on planes and in airports had to have been a challenge even if the kid wasn't worried/scared.

It could also have potentially been highly distressing to the child to end up in the wrong city.

I had my niece flown to me once when she was 6, and she was quite upset that her flight had taken 3 hours instead of 40 minutes (it was delayed). She had been 'promised' she'd only be on her own for 40 minutes, and got worried when it took longer. Kids are really never alone, so it does worry them.

So many things could have gone wrong in this scenario. It's fantastic that everyone seems to have emerged unscathed, but no one knew where this little girl was for hours.

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Parents get a security pass, walk their child to the gate, ensure that the child goes to the right plane, wait til the plane takes off then leaves. Done it many times.

Continental's fault? not really The parent wasn't paying the child premium. Bottom line, the parent needs to take the responsibility for their child. You are still handing them over to a total stranger. Just because they wear a uniform doesn't mean they have functional brain cells.

The one thing I see Continental doing VERY VERY wrong is getting the boarding pass and not reading ALL THE WORDS and allowing the child to board the wrong plane. Readers are leaders!!! But if the parent was there, they should be aware of gate 1A vs 1B and said something.

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This isn't a bad offer.@bilge: If you read the original article, in their original response to the situation, they didn't offer to fly the kid to Cleveland, they just called the in-laws in Cleveland and said "Come get your minor in Newark", then the in-laws had to fly to Newark to pick her up.

Continental probably has a half-dozen BOS-CLE flights each day--just get the kid on the the next one.

Umm, how does a BOS-CLE flight help her when she's in Newark?

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@axiomatic:
I think the first time they were dealing with lower level employees at the Cleveland airport who wouldn't have the authority to offer something like this. And I think we're assuming that what they offered in Cleveland (refund of unaccompanied child fee) was ALL they were going to offer, which may not have been true.

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If this had been their FIRST response, along with a real apology, I'd say it's enough. After their INCREDIBLY douchey initial response, though, nothing short of lifetime free flights will suffice. And a large cash payment, too, thanks very much. I know it's more than what's really warranted, but after their initial offer (refunding child's transfer fee) I want them to really suffer.

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Sounds like a reasonable offer to me. I doubt they'd get very far with a lawsuit, and a lawsuit would look like an attempt to cash in.

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@Daniel Parmelee: It sounds reasonable to me as well, provided that the little girl is OK. If she has any sort of ongoing discomfort about being away from her parents, the airline should toss in some therapy money.

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The compensation seems decent. On the other hand, I have always wondered how people end up on the wrong plane in the first place. I have been on a flight before where we were going from SF to Buffalo via Vegas and sure enough after we push away, there is a lady on the flight that should be going to Phoenix and not be on this plane. I don't get how they get there in the first place? I mean they check your tickets and sometimes even scan them, they announce the flight and the destination numerous times before you board and once your on. How do people get to where they are past the point of no return? I mean it just seems like massive fail on both the consummer and airlines side. With this incident being a child it is a bit different but it is just something that I know happens often enough yet I have just never understood.

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@Cant_stop_the_rock: Worse, it would keep the incident fresh in the mind of the child for years, potentially, while the suit dragged on.

Yes, it was a HUGE mistake, but you have to let the kid move on so she is frightened of being without her parents for the rest of her childhood.

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@Cant_stop_the_rock: If what you say is true then I stand corrected. But the wording "Continental Airlines has made a much more generous offer to the family" leads me to believe that there was a previous offer that was unacceptable... so why don't you all put the rope away and stop trying to get me to hang myself?

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It sounds to me like they are taking it seriously. This is a really good effort to make amends as long as they really do make sure it doesn't happen again. I doubt they would have done this if the news hadn't gotten out.

How did it happen though? Every time I fly a regional jet my ticket always gets checked again when I get on the jet, not just at the gate.

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It placates the family but doesn't address the security issue that two flights took off with incorrect passenger counts.

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@bilge: People freakout when a package is misdelivered - how are you supposed to feel when YOUR CHILD is sent to the wrong city and state?

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@takes_so_little: Yes, it's an emotional reaction, but dammit, "Refund the fee" just set me off!

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@axiomatic: You've been swinging since 3:37 PM.

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@takes_so_little: How about they give the child the aircraft that transported her to the wrong destination?

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@John Henschen: Personally, I find foot walking to be much simpler. I can't imagine walking around an airport on my hands with a 105 degree fever. Really, you only have yourself to blame.

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@roshambo: I will make a guess and say that if nothing else the ridiculous gate changes cause this. There have been several times where I have had a gate change that was not shown at the gate (so the wall monitors would have it but none of the displays you show that you are no longer leaving out of that gate). It is also pretty easy to get on the wrong plane when you are at an airport that requires you to walk outside to the plane.

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The title should probably be changed to "Continental Offers Free Flights, Frequent-Flyer Status To The Family Of Misrouted Child" to avoid confusion.

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@roshambo: I really don't think the flight attendants pay much attention, and frequent flyers don't either. We had our corporate VP (Fortune 200)end up on the wrong plane because the towns were the same. His assistant booked the wrong flight, he got on it, and ended up in the wrong state. Considering he made that flight at least 4 times a year, you'd think he would have noticed that everything seemed wrong and different, but no.

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@bilge: You're a douche. There. I said it. The guy's kid didn't get off the plane she was supposed to get off of, she was alone in a city she wasn't supposed to be in...and probably scared. How would you feel if your overinflated sense of self worth ended up in stranded in Newark?

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@humphrmi: I don't think that was their intent. I think the Newark crew thought the kid was supposed to be there. From the original article, there was no mention of the city-they went to the gate, their kid wasn't there. Newark looks around, no parents. It took a bit to figure out what went wrong-then they offered to fly the kid to the correct destination and refund the fee-about all a low level employee could do. The powers higher up added this package to the deal after hearing of their screwup.

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@takes_so_little: I'm assuming a low-level employee offered that. They don't exactly have the power to do what ended up being offered. Still should not have happened, but the end result is adequate.

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@IfThenElvis: Maybe there's a Newark guy in Cleveland kicking himself for being so stupid :). If not, yeah, that's a problem.

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@Coles_Law: Agreed, but my point is that the situation wasn't as simple as @bilge suggested.