Daily Press (Sunday)

Should Amtrak provide refund for ‘traumatic nightmare’ trip?

- By Christophe­r Elliott Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Elliott’s latest book is “How To Be The World’s Smartest Traveler” (National Geographic). C

I’m sorry you had such a difficult trip to Oklahoma. Amtrak should have done better — no delays, putting you in the right section of the train and treating you with dignity.

None of these issues rises to the level of qualifying for a refund. Amtrak doesn’t provide refunds for late trains. It does refund part of your ticket for an involuntar­y downgrade. But it does not offer your money back because of rude employees.

But taken together, these complaints add up. You also furnished me with a detailed trip report that you sent to your bank when you disputed the charges for your train fare. You were not exaggerati­ng when you called it a traumatic nightmare. I would have fought for a refund, too.

Technicall­y, Amtrak

Q: I took my 7-year-old daughter on our first Amtrak trip, from Chemult, Oregon, to OklaCity, homa Oklahoma, to visit her cousins this summer.

The trip was a nightmare. Amtrak delayed our first train by seven hours. It failed to provide all the meals on our 26-hour trip. I had paid for a sleeper, but Amtrak seated us in the wrong section of the train. An employee yelled at me for“taking his seat”on a coach train where there were no assigned seats.

So I canceled our return trip and paid almost $1,000 for airfare to get home. The airfare wiped out my savings.

When I canceled our Amtrak return trip and explained why, a representa­tive assured me that I’d receive a “full refund for my purchase.” That promise was six weeks ago, and now they’re saying I’m not eligible for a refund.

In my view, I purchased services that were never delivered (i.e., meals and bedroom accommodat­ions for three days), and as a result of Amtrak not providing the services promised with my purchase, they forced me to spend money I don’t really have in order to transport my daughter and myself back home.

— Kimberli Eicher, Bend, Oregon

was entitled to keep your money. After all, it had provided you with transporta­tion from Oregon to Oklahoma. But a representa­tive had already agreed to refund half your fare, so it’s reasonable to expect Amtrak to do what it promised.

Instead, Amtrak reneged and insisted on keeping your money.

As I already mentioned, you filed a credit card dispute to recover your money after Amtrak told you it would not refund your ticket. You can file a chargeback for a service that you paid for but did not receive, so I think you had a case. You contacted me before the dispute was resolved, asking me to intervene.

I think you may have missed a step. When a company says “no,” you can always appeal to an executive. I list the

names, numbers and email addresses of the Amtrak executives on my consumer advocacy site at www.elliott.org/companycon­tacts/amtrak. I would have tried that before disputing your charges.

I reached out to Amtrak for you. A representa­tive reviewed your file and agreed that your trip did not go as it should have. Amtrak refunded your ticket and offered you a credit for a make-good trip — just in case you want to try Amtrak again.

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