South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Where are the tickets from Legoland combo package?

- King Features Syndicate

Q: I booked a visit to Legoland New York Theme Park & Resort based on an offer I received from the theme park for its October Brick-or-Treat hotel and park combo package.

I paid the quoted price, but they sent a follow-up email that I wasn’t charged for park tickets, and I had two options: Pay up or cancel.

Multiple calls to the company result in them holding the line — pay or go. You can’t speak to anyone beyond the customer-service representa­tive. Escalation to management is only done internally. Responses take seven to 10 days. But after two attempts, I’ve never gotten a reply.

I’ve also emailed the customer-service address and haven’t gotten any replies. I can’t believe a family-focused attraction new to our area would stonewall like this, especially when they made an error. I feel like they need to honor the price they quoted, but I’d love just to be able to talk it through with a representa­tive with decision-making authority.

The additional pricing increases the $1,094 visit by another $600, or a 60% increase!

Can you help? We’re heading there soon and of course, this bad news came after we told the kids, so we’re in a tight spot!

— Noreen O’Donnell, Brooklyn, New York

A: Oh, you are in a tight spot. Once you’ve told the kids, you pretty much have to go. As a father of three myself, I have experience­d that many times. And to give you an idea of how serious it got, we had to move to Orlando to satisfy their theme park cravings. But I digress.

The offer you received from Legoland New York Theme Park & Resort should have included theme park tickets. When you pointed this error out to the company, it should have fixed it right away.

Instead, the company led you through a proverbial Lego maze of calls and emails. That’s too bad. I love Legoland. I’ve visited the Legolands in Florida and California with my kids, and they love it, too. OK, some of the little rides

aren’t really for adults. But Legos speak to kids of all ages. When that happiness collapses like a poorly built tower, then no one is happy.

Maybe the most maddening part of your experience was dealing with Legoland’s customer-service agents. They offered neither a substantiv­e response to your legitimate complaint nor a way to appeal your case. With the day of your arrival drawing closer, you had to do something.

There’s a way out of the Legoland customer-service maze. I publish the names, numbers and email addresses of the Legoland customer service executives on my nonprofit customer-service site at www.elliott.org/company-contacts/legoland

new-york-resort/.

Legoland says it experience­d “an unfortunat­e system error” during your booking. Because of that error, the booking you made does not have valid tickets.

I contacted Legoland on your behalf. The company reviewed your reservatio­n and apologized for the difficulty you were experienci­ng. You received an email with the promised park tickets.

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). Contact him at elliott.org/ help or chris@elliott.org.

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