The Province

It’s a Beautiful Day for some, others, not so much

- DERRICK PENNER depenner@postmedia.com

The May 12 U2 concert at B.C. Place Stadium was supposed to be a triumphant kickoff for the supergroup’s world tour honouring the 30th anniversar­y of its breakthrou­gh Joshua Tree album.

The evening, however, descended into a ticketing debacle that saw a long line of frustrated, general-admission fans stuck outside the stadium, which resulted in them missing opening-act Mumford & Sons, a star band in its own right.

Now, attendees who registered complaints over the fiasco are receiving word they will get a measure of compensati­on for the inconvenie­nce, which some ticket-holders are OK with, but others, not so much.

Ticketmast­er is sending $50 gift cards for each ticket bought, for use against future events, and B.C. Place is offering free admission to a Vancouver Whitecaps or B.C. Lions game, with a $20 food and beverage voucher attached to each entry.

“B.C. Place is dedicated to delivering excellent customer service at every event, and we acknowledg­e that on this occasion we let you down,” reads the email spelling out the offer sent to ticket-holders.

Delta resident Chad Eueverman said he’ll take the compensati­on, but isn’t completely satisfied because it doesn’t make up for having missed Mumford & Sons.

“Ultimately, how do you get a concert from these guys back?” Eueverman said. “You don’t.”

“It’s not a horrible offer,” said Justin Johnson, who had travelled to Vancouver from Philadelph­ia for the concert in a Twitter exchange with a reporter.

For him, the general-admission tickets cost US$70 each, so “taking the $50 each to put it behind us is probably worth it at this point.”

“Settlement or not, B.C. Place has a blemish on (its) reputation going forward,” Johnson said.

But the offer isn’t much consolatio­n for Victoria’s Brenda Brophy and her husband. Ticketmast­er isn’t widely used on Vancouver Island, so the $50 gift cards aren’t much use to them, and neither are soccer or football fans, so they wouldn’t travel to Vancouver just to see a game.

“It’s kind of like getting food-poisoning at a restaurant and them saying, ‘The next meal’s on us,’ ” Brophy said. “Well no, I want my money back.”

Brophy said she’s already responded to B.C. Place that she wants cash compensati­on, or perhaps free admission to a show of their choice, not credits or gift cards. If someone started a class-action lawsuit, Brophy said she would sign up.

 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN ?? Some general-admission fans who attended a May 12 U2 concert at B.C. Place Stadium are receiving $50 gift cards from Ticketmast­er for future shows at the venue.
GERRY KAHRMANN Some general-admission fans who attended a May 12 U2 concert at B.C. Place Stadium are receiving $50 gift cards from Ticketmast­er for future shows at the venue.

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