Daily Press (Sunday)

With hurricane on the way, are tickets now worthless?

- By Christophe­r Elliott King Features Syndicate 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”

A: It looks like you’re stuck between your bank, your airline and a hurricane. Not a good place to be!

Your destinatio­n wedding was moved from the Dominican Republic to Cancun, Mexico, after a hurricane took aim at the island. That’s one of the risks of traveling to the Caribbean during hurricane season. It looks like you had travel insurance — good call — but it wouldn’t cover you because the storm wasn’t imminent.

You already paid for three tickets using your points via U.S. Bank Visa. Typically, that’s a one-way transactio­n — you can’t get the points refunded to your account. It looks like American Airlines had authorized flight ticket changes between Sept. 17 and Sept. 25, but the wedding was happening later that month.

Q: I used my U.S. Bank Visa card points to buy three economy tickets on American Airlines to attend a destinatio­n wedding in the Dominican Republic. The wedding was relocated to Mexico because of a hurricane.

I’ve communicat­ed with American Airlines, but it is unwilling to reschedule us since our departure date does not fall within their travel alert. We have basic economy class tickets, which can’t be changed. We now need to pay for three more tickets to attend the wedding in Mexico.

I have asked the U.S. Bank Rewards Center what they can do for me about this situation, and they said the only option is to contact American Airlines to see if they would consider other options. And when I ask American Airlines, they just refer me back to U.S. Bank Visa. Can you help?

— Char Collins, Minneapoli­s

American Airlines should have seen the proban lem and made exception to its refund rules. And I think it would have, if you had complained to the right person. Unfortunat­ely, the folks at American’s customer service department could only repeat their policy, which is what they’re trained to do. Escalating this to a higher level, with one of the American Airlines executive contacts I publish on my consumer advocacy site, Elliott. org, might have helped. A brief, polite email might have allowed you to use your flight credit for the reschedule­d wedding in Mexico.

Your case highlights the risks of using credit card miles to book a flight. When you have another party involved (your bank or credit card company),

you are often at the mercy of its policies in addition to the airline rules. And you may also find that your ticket comes with extra restrictio­ns that could render it useless if you need to make a change.

I contacted American Airlines on your behalf. A manager reviewed your problem and agreed to refund $582 as trip credit, which you can use to pay for flights to the new wedding location in Mexico.

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