The Morning Call (Sunday)

Traveler looking for refund after train canceled, rebooked

- By Christophe­r Elliott | King Features Syndicate — John deCastro, San Francisco Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of Elliott Advocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Contact him at elliott.org/help or

This should have been two simple transactio­ns. Amtrak canceled your first train from Boston to Baltimore. You should have received a full refund for that. And transactio­n number two? You buy a new ticket. Instead, Amtrak combined these into one problem, turning it into a complex case that involved a cancellati­on and a credit. Oh, boy.

Here’s the confusing part: It’s not entirely clear if you tried to change your ticket before Amtrak canceled it or afterward. If you did it before, then cancellati­on penalties might apply, and you could lose part, or all, of your ticket credit.

I recently tried to change an Amtrak ticket from Boston to Baltimore. I couldn’t find a way to do it online, and Amtrak’s online chat was of no help. When I reached the call center, I found out that the train was canceled.

An Amtrak agent told me that they could not change my train reservatio­n, but didn’t mention that my train had been canceled. Now I am trying to apply all, or part, of my original reservatio­n to the cost of a new ticket.

I bought a new ticket online for $127. The original fare was $74. An Amtrak agent suggested that I should ask for a refund of the difference between the rail fares.

Given that Amtrak canceled the original reservatio­n, I think I am owed a refund of $53. I asked Amtrak, but it has not responded. I escalated my request in writing to one of the executive contacts on your consumer advocacy website and haven’t heard anything. Can you help me?

If, however, Amtrak canceled before you did, then you should have received a full refund, or Amtrak should have rebooked you on another train without you having to buy a new ticket.

You followed all the right steps for resolving this, including keeping a paper trail and appealing to one of the executive contacts for Amtrak who I list on my consumer advocacy site, Elliott.org. Someone from Amtrak should have responded and straighten­ed this out. The easiest fix would have been to just refund your first ticket.

By the way, you are not the first reader who has complained about Amtrak’s site. Amtrak has a step-by-step guide on changing your reservatio­n on its site. Next time you have to change your ticket, you might want to check it out. My inner consumer advocate says that such a guide should not be necessary; it should be obvious how to change your ticket.

I contacted Amtrak on your behalf. The company refunded your $53.

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