USA TODAY US Edition

2019 travel wish list: Honesty, space

- On Travel

Honesty. Respect. And a little space. That’s all travelers want in 2019. Are they asking for too much?

How did I arrive at this simple wish list? I asked. You said you’d like the industry to tell you the truth about its prices and fees. You want employees to treat you with respect, no matter how much you paid for your ticket or the color of your credit card. And you said you’re done with being cramped.

As we head into 2019, the industry thinks it knows what travelers want. It’s adding new amenities, more fees and more expensive travel options, claiming you requested it. That’s not what you told me.

Honesty: Tell truth about prices

Travelers became exasperate­d with the travel industry’s price games this year. When they ask for a hotel or car rental rate, they want to know the amount up front. They don’t want to wait until they pay to see a total. That’s unfair and deceptive.

“I would like to see nickel-and-dime fees to go away,” says Kathryn Binau, a business developmen­t executive from Waunakee, Wisconsin.

Her biggest pet peeve is hotel resort fees, mandatory surcharges tacked on to a “base” hotel rate. The average resort fee now stands at around $21 per night, up 14 percent from last year, according to ResortFeeC­hecker.com, a site that tracks resort fees.

That should be illegal. In Australia, for example, businesses must disclose a full price at the beginning of the online purchasing process. Consumers can report violations to the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) looked into this pricing practice in 2012 but failed to require businesses to quote an all-in price up front.

Respect: We’re not just cargo

“We need better customer service,” says Carol Stratford, a frequent traveler and small-business owner from Newbury, Ohio.

The travel industry doesn’t treat its customers well. Nowhere is that truer than in the airline industry, which is a perpetual bottom-feeder when it comes to customer service. The latest American Customer Satisfacti­on Index gives the airline industry a cumulative score of 73 out of 100, down 2.3% from last year. With all the junk fees and hassles, many travelers complain that the airline industry doesn’t seem to care for the human cargo it carries.

Not everyone is cargo. In 2018, airlines kept busy adding luxurious new business-class seats to attract more bigspendin­g fliers. But if you sit in the back of the plane, you’ll find that domestic airlines treat the rest of their customers more and more like cattle. Wouldn’t it be nice if the airline industry could treat all of us – not just the platinum-card carrying elites – with respect?

A little space: Stop seat shrinkage

“I’d like to see more legroom on domestic and internatio­nal flights,” says Sherrie Funk, a travel agency owner from Brentwood, Tennessee.

The average seat pitch, a rough measure of legroom, has shrunk from 35 inches in the 1970s to about 31 inches today. And the average width has shriveled from 18 inches to about 16 inches.

Travelers believed their prayers for relief were answered this fall when Congress passed a law mandating minimum seat size. But the devil is in the details. The law doesn’t set a minimum – it directs the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to do so. I’d be willing to bet the FAA will set the bar low, which will cause the other airlines to shrink their economy class seats to the bare minimum to remain “competitiv­e.”

This shouldn’t be an issue. If travel companies were honest with their customers, and if they respected them, they would not wedge them into a sardine-can enclosure of a seat. And they certainly wouldn’t pretend that we “asked” for it because we wanted less expensive fares.

What else do travelers want?

❚ More power outlets. Mark Fei, who works for a technology company in Seattle, says he’s noticed that many hotels don’t have enough power outlets. “It would be nice to have outlets next to both sides of the bed since many travelers now use Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines,” he says.

❚ No more family separation on

planes. “Airlines should not be allowed to separate kids from parents,” says Meera Sundram, a retired health care executive who lives in Amman, Jordan. “It creates a horrible situation where families have to ask others to trade seats, for which they have often paid extra.”

Congress passed a law that would require airlines to seat families together, but it still hasn’t been put into effect, thanks to government bureaucrac­y.

❚ Cut the waste. “More effort put into recycling,” says Susan Alcorn, who owns a publishing company in Oakland, California. She sees too many plastic and styrofoam cups and too few recycle bins when she travels. Indeed, hotel trash cans have been vanishing lately in a misguided effort to control cleaning costs. That’s the wrong direction.

Christophe­r Elliott is a consumer advocate. Contact him at chris@elliott.org or visit elliott.org.

 ?? JEREMY DWYER-LINDGREN/ SPECIAL TO USA TODAY ?? Airlines have been adding appealing amenities for business-class passengers, but regular flyers complain of being cramped.
JEREMY DWYER-LINDGREN/ SPECIAL TO USA TODAY Airlines have been adding appealing amenities for business-class passengers, but regular flyers complain of being cramped.
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