Baltimore Sun Sunday

After 2 false starts, who pays for unused tickets?

- By Jae-Ha Kim By Christophe­r Elliott

In the hit film “Love, Simon,” Clark Moore plays a high school student named Ethan, who — unlike the titular character — is out and self-aware of his sexuality.

Clark, who grew up in Atlanta and resides in Los Angeles, says that every time he leaves LA, he “flirts with the idea of moving. I found myself looking at apartment listings in the windows of real estate agencies in Paris on my last trip. When my mind drifts, I often find myself on Zillow looking at houses on Martha’s Vineyard. Hopefully, these big trips will become more frequent.”

An edited version of our conversati­on follows.

A: Attending the royal wedding (of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle).

Qand Paris. In Paris, I would encourage (people) to stay long enough to see all of the big tourist sites, but still be able to go off the beaten path and explore some of the outer arrondisse­ments (of Paris). On Martha’s Vineyard, I would encourage them to throw out their itinerary and just enjoy being there — sunrise walks on the beach, watching the summer showers from a rocking chair on the porch and midday catnaps.

A: I love to get out to Palm Springs (Calif.). The desert can be very relaxing and peaceful. And my good friend from college has a lovely family home in Ventura (Calif.) that I’ve been fortunate enough to visit a couple of times. There’s nothing as soothing as falling asleep to the sound of the waves crashing against the sea wall.

I recently had tickets to fly from Tucson, Ariz., to the Galapagos, via Los Angeles and Quito, Ecuador. The Tucson-to-LA flights were one-way tickets, and the LA-to-Quito segment was connected in our reservatio­ns. However, all of the tickets had been booked through the Chase website, except the Galapagos tickets, which were purchased through MyTrip.com.

I missed the LA-to-Quito flight because of flight delays outside of our control, which screwed up the Galapagos flight. I canceled the flight ahead of time and attempted to reschedule for a fee of $201. I received four new e-tickets from MyTrip with flight informatio­n for a flight with Ecuador’s national airline, Tame, confirming the reschedule. But, two days later, when I arrived at 7 a.m. for our departure flight at 9 a.m., an airline representa­tive told me I wasn’t “on the manifest.” It turns out my reservatio­n had been canceled. I bought tickets with another airline for the next flight out, five hours later, for an additional $1,100.

I have contacted MyTrip by phone and by email multiple times, requesting a refund for the rebooking fee and the oneway tickets, since neither service was actually provided, despite being paid for. Any advice you can provide about how to navigate the rules and obtain a refund would be extremely helpful and greatly appreciate­d.

A: Wow, what a mess. It looks as if you were selfbookin­g and using a discount online travel agency to get from Tucson to the Galapagos. Nothing wrong with that, as long as you know what you’re doing.

Booking a one-way, unconnecte­d ticket is a little risky, as you found out. That’s because the airline has no way of knowing of your connection unless you tell it. So American wouldn’t have known that you needed to get to Quito, and with your first flight delayed, you’d be stranded at LAX.

If you’d worked with a competent travel agent, the tickets would have been connected in the reservatio­ns system — meaning that if one segment had a problem, the other airlines would find a way to re-accommodat­e you at no extra cost. As it turns out, you had to reschedule your trip and pay $1,301 more.

But who is responsibl­e for this?

It’s possible that some of the confusion is related to your airline, which allowed you to book unconnecte­d tickets on the same itinerary. Certainly, your online agent bears some responsibi­lity, although only for the flights it booked. And, of course, you made your fair share of mistakes.

Contacting your online agency, MyTrip.com, was the right first step. You can find the company’s English-language support page on its site: Technicall­y, you were not entitled to a refund of either the change fee or the new fare, since you made your own reservatio­n. But when I asked MyTrip.com about your reservatio­n, it tried to help. It turns out you’d disputed the first change fee on your credit card. You asked your bank to lift the dispute, and the airline agreed to reverse the fee. MyTrip.com also says it checked with Tame, which refunded the original fare you paid to reach the islands.

 ?? CLARK MOORE PHOTO ??
CLARK MOORE PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States