The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Fed-up fliers

Many frustrated by service cuts, horror stories vow to avoid airlines

- BY CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

After years of watching service decline and fees rise, avid traveller George Chow didn’t need another reason to avoid the airlines.

But a steady stream of horror stories in the news is only cementing his resolve to find other modes of transport whenever possible.

A planned excursion to the Maritimes this fall will almost certainly be by train or car, says the Markham, Ont., resident.

“It’s just getting more and more difficult and challengin­g to get onto a plane,” complains Chow, a 55-year-old semi-retired accountant.

The latest airline flap, reported by the CBC on Wednesday, involves a complaint that a 15-year-old boy travelling alone was stuck at Toronto’s Pearson airport overnight after a delay caused him to miss his connecting flight with Air Canada.

His mother said he wasn’t offered any help with meals or accommodat­ion.

An Air Canada spokesman said the airline was sorry to learn of the boy’s experience and has contacted the family.

And travellers are still stewing over the violent ejection of a United Airlines passenger in April.

Cellphone video of a Kentucky doctor being dragged off an overbooked jetliner sparked widespread anger over the way he was treated, and added fuel to years of simmering complaints about general service cuts, cramped seats and soaring surcharges.

What was once the most convenient way to travel has now become fraught with stress and worry, say many Canadians planning their summer getaways.

“I’ve never gone on a flight and just gone, ‘Wow, that was so easy to do with my family,”’ says Ontario singer-songwriter Sarah Blackwood, who often can’t avoid flying to concert dates.

“If I had the choice and time wasn’t an issue, I wouldn’t ever fly, it’s my least favourite part of the job.”

It’s especially stressful for families with young kids, says the Walk Off the Earth singer, who made headlines two years ago when she was kicked off a flight operated by United Airlines because her toddler was crying.

She sympathize­s anytime she sees a mom struggling to wrangle kids on a flight.

That was the case with an American Airlines scuffle that made headlines last month. A flight attendant was accused of violently grabbing a doublewide stroller from a passenger as she tried to put it in an overhead bin, allegedly hitting her and narrowly missing her baby in the process.

Blackwood implores airlines to be more patient with parents and for airports to offer play areas that can help stave off tantrums and crying fits when it’s time to board.

“Travelling with kids is not ever going to be easy but I’ve been in situations where I’ve gone up to the check-in desk and they’ve told me I can’t bring my stroller through the gate,” says Blackwood, who travels by tour bus whenever possible.

“Imagine — I was travelling on my own and had to carry one child and then drag the other one.”

 ?? CP PHOTO/LIAM RICHARDS ?? Walk Off The Earth members including Sarah Blackwood, centre, pose on the green carpet before the 2013 Juno Gala, Dinner and Awards in Regina on April 20, 2013. “I’ve never gone on a flight and just gone, ‘Wow, that was so easy to do with my family,’”...
CP PHOTO/LIAM RICHARDS Walk Off The Earth members including Sarah Blackwood, centre, pose on the green carpet before the 2013 Juno Gala, Dinner and Awards in Regina on April 20, 2013. “I’ve never gone on a flight and just gone, ‘Wow, that was so easy to do with my family,’”...

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