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Doctor violently dragged from full United flight (2 Viewers)

Has anyone heard this?? A friend that's an United employee said Dao initially left the plane and accepted the financial offer. However when he found out he wouldn't get home until the next day he went back on the plane and took his seat. Then all the mayhem took place. Is this a BS story? Has it been reported anywhere?
Yes, this has been reported and is publicly known. Dao was willing to be bumped for a few hours, but not bumped until the following afternoon.

There are a lot of weird little twists to the whole story. Dao was travelling with his wife, and United wanted to separate the two -- fly his wife to Louisville but leave Dao behind. United did not remove Dao's luggage from cargo, and they shipped them to the wrong address afterwards.

 
Yes, this has been reported and is publicly known. Dao was willing to be bumped for a few hours, but not bumped until the following afternoon.

There are a lot of weird little twists to the whole story. Dao was travelling with his wife, and United wanted to separate the two -- fly his wife to Louisville but leave Dao behind. United did not remove Dao's luggage from cargo, and they shipped them to the wrong address afterwards.
So the contention, then, is someone from the airline knew he was a doctor with an office, looked up that address, and intentionally sent his luggage there as an FU to him? Possible. ####ty if true. Also possible that was the address on the luggage tags and/or paperwork and that's what they went with? Seems like the kind of thing where omission of a small detail makes the airline look worse and just pours more gas on the fire.

Probably moot. At the point they forcibly removed him from that flight, his belongings should have been retrieved and given to him or his wife ASAP. Least they could do under the circumstances.

 
Seems like the kind of thing where omission of a small detail makes the airline look worse and just pours more gas on the fire.
I think you're right, but there's a problem here for United: they're going to get publicly hammered, for a while, for borderline offenses. AND, they're going to get hammered, for a while, for things other airlines have gotten away with. "United" now stands for "terrible customer service airline". Furthermore, people will be totally positive that overbooking** is way worse on United than on other carriers even though statistics don't bear that out.

If Delta, Southwest, Alaska Airlines, etc. had people digging furiously into their customer-service stories from hell, it would probably be really easy to find damaging accounts. But other airlines are getting a total pass at the moment, for whatever that's worth ... at United's expense. Perception matters.
 

** Yes, I realize that the Dao incident wasn't an overbooking situation. The general public doesn't care.

 
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Personnel is paid to adhere to policy. Organizations put policy in place so every situation is not left to employee discretion. 
Policy can ALWAYS be over ridden by someone in authority. I've said this numerous times in this thread and it keeps getting conveniently buried.

1) The policy in place does not seem to match this situation. 

2) It's my understanding that the offer was capped at $800 which was not the max. I believe they had the opportunity to raise the ante without need of approval from higher ups.

3) Policy can always be over ridden by someone of a level with authority to do so. Employees need to use common sense and when something doesn't pass the smell test ESCALATE and request an over ride. Not doing so is lazy and irresponsible. I don't know about you but I wouldn't want walking, talking zombie employees that simply point to policy and don't use common sense.

If UA's policy does not allow for an over ride from proper levels and if employees have no ability to question the application of the policy to a situation then their process is broken.

 
Poll: People Won’t Fly United If Another Airline Has An Identical Flight (also picked up by the NYT)
 

People are so mad at United Airlines that over 40 percent of those who have heard about the airline recently also say they would pay more money and endure a layover to avoid flying with the company.

...

Among people who had heard of the incident, 79 percent chose an American flight instead of United. The beleaguered airline eventually grabbed a majority of customers when the American flight was more expensive and longer. But even then, 44 percent said they’d rather fly with American Airlines.
I know this effect won't last forever ... but still, this thing has a lot longer legs than many initially expected. And media like this is self-reinforcing.

 
Meh I don't buy the couples story on this one
Yeah, their account seemed weak. However, since the name "United" was involved, it made national television news (saw it on CBS Evening News yesterday afternoon).

Other airlines can still screw up in ordinary ways and skate on by. United can't even so much as sneeze in a customer's direction now.

EDIT: I mean, look at this headline:

   United Airlines faces more drama after a bride and groom were reportedly dragged off a flight by a US Marshal

Now, come on. David Dao was dragged off. This couple was not. But who cares? Nobody, that's who.

 
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Their story is that someone was sleeping on their seats, so they squatted in first class?  Then were kicked off the flight?

There's a big hole in that story somewhere.
Correct. These people are lying.

Yes, airlines suck sometimes, but the last thing we as consumers need is for United to go #### up and reducing the much needed competition.

 
Correct. These people are lying.

Yes, airlines suck sometimes, but the last thing we as consumers need is for United to go #### up and reducing the much needed competition.
... looking ahead 20-25 years ... could the feds one day break up the airline industry the way they did with the telecoms in the 1980s?

 
Small tidbit buried in a Los Angeles Times article from last Friday -- we'd all heard that Delta had a new policy that sweetened the pot for voluntary bumps. Now, new policy from American Airlines:

American Airlines updated its rules to say that no passenger who has boarded the plane will be removed to give the seat to someone else.
So, at least on American Airlines: once you're seated, you're golden.

 
From the same article ... hadn't seen this laid out quite this way. We'd seen raw numbers of passengers bumped, but not dollars-per-bump.

Keep in mind when reading this that Delta uses a reverse-auction system to figure out how much to pay to bump passengers -- their flight attendants don't stand up front and call out "$400 ... $800 ... etc."
 

An Associated Press analysis of government data shows that in 2015 and 2016, Delta paid an average of $1,118 in compensation for every passenger that it denied a seat. Southwest Airlines paid $758, United $565, and American Airlines $554.

After the incident in Chicago, critics questioned why United didn't offer more when no passengers accepted the airline's $800 offer for volunteers to give up their seats.

"If you offer enough money, even the guy going to a funeral will sell his seat," said Ross Aimer, a retired United pilot.

 
Jobber said:
Correct. These people are lying.

Yes, airlines suck sometimes, but the last thing we as consumers need is for United to go #### up and reducing the much needed competition.
They claimed they weren't in first class, but if they were in the preferred section that's still considered a different level of sevice.

And United isn't going anywhere.  Too big to fail.  Their profitability may take a hit due to an asian market hit, though (international flights are the money makers).

 
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https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/united-airlines-incident-from-perspective-airline-transport-fenton

Should he have been bloodied? No. Was he committing a federal felony? Yes.

Can you sue for damages when the injuries happened in the commission of a felony?
Sure.  If the removing officer had pulled a gun and shot him in the head, his survivors would absolutely have been able to sue for damages despite any crime he may have been committing in that video.

 
What I don't get is that the couple were removed as a security threat and then allowed to fly the next day.  What could possibly transpire in a day that would transform them from being a threat?  I have no issue with them being booted.

 
What I don't get is that the couple were removed as a security threat and then allowed to fly the next day.  What could possibly transpire in a day that would transform them from being a threat?  I have no issue with them being booted.
Airlines often do this.  Remove someone, diffuse the situation, and then let them fly the next day.

 
What I don't get is that the couple were removed as a security threat and then allowed to fly the next day.  What could possibly transpire in a day that would transform them from being a threat?  I have no issue with them being booted.
Think of a temporary condition whereby people (who may otherwise not be) have been known to become obnoxious, combative, insolent, etc.

 
Think of a temporary condition whereby people (who may otherwise not be) have been known to become obnoxious, combative, insolent, etc.
I guess but it seems disingenuous to say that people are a threat one day and safe the next.  Maybe I'm wrong.

 
Doug B said:
Yeah, their account seemed weak. However, since the name "United" was involved, it made national television news (saw it on CBS Evening News yesterday afternoon).

Other airlines can still screw up in ordinary ways and skate on by. United can't even so much as sneeze in a customer's direction now.

EDIT: I mean, look at this headline:

   United Airlines faces more drama after a bride and groom were reportedly dragged off a flight by a US Marshal

Now, come on. David Dao was dragged off. This couple was not. But who cares? Nobody, that's who.
“These passengers repeatedly attempted to sit in upgraded seating which they did not purchase and they would not follow crew instructions to return to their assigned seats,” a spokesperson said.

According to United, the couple tried to move into Economy Plus seats and no police or U.S. Marshals were involved in the incident.
I haven't flown United in probably 6-7 years. Do you get anything other than a larger seat if you move from Economy to Economy Plus on United? If that's all you get--and the seats weren't going to be used by anyone else--it was a #### move by that United crew. I've been on lots of flights that weren't full and people move all the time. 

 
I haven't flown United in probably 6-7 years. Do you get anything other than a larger seat if you move from Economy to Economy Plus on United? If that's all you get--and the seats weren't going to be used by anyone else--it was a #### move by that United crew. I've been on lots of flights that weren't full and people move all the time. 
The couple's story sounds fishy. 

 
I think the big issue is overbooking.  Don't overbook, and this isn't a problem.  Airlines are allowed to do this because they apparently have convinced the government that they can't figure out how to run a business otherwise.
They need to overbook. Their margins necessitate it because too many self entitled twats are not showing up to their bookings (inconsiderate sods), fuel costs are going down (good for them), but they are still rough, and government regulation (bad for them) and alternative lawsuits (very bad for them) are on rise. Ideally they would have needed to have a case by case analysis of the passenger's arguments when they alerted the passengers in the random testing. That costs time and money.  That being said, but this was/is still a colossal poop-emoji. I would happily be on the passenger's side here.

 
I haven't flown United in probably 6-7 years. Do you get anything other than a larger seat if you move from Economy to Economy Plus on United? If that's all you get--and the seats weren't going to be used by anyone else--it was a #### move by that United crew. I've been on lots of flights that weren't full and people move all the time. 
I don't fly United but assuming that's it's like other airlines in that you get more leg room and people pay generally around $30-50 (or have some level of status) that gives them those seats.

 
From today's Wall Street Journal -- subscription-free reprint link here:


Behind United Airlines’ Fateful Decision to Call Police

Airline’s rules-based culture in spotlight after man was dragged off flight by law enforcement

The recipe for the disastrous decision by United Airlines’ employees to call for police to remove a passenger from a fully booked flight was years in the making.

Like most other airlines, United Continental follows strict rules on every aspect of handling its passengers, from how to care for unaccompanied minors to whether someone gets a whole can of Coke.

While procedures change to keep up with evolving safety and security protocols, streamlining the underlying bureaucracy can be a lower priority for an operations-focused carrier such as United. Deviating from the rules is frowned upon and employees can face termination for a foul-up, according to people familiar with the matter.

At United, this has helped ­create a rules-based culture where its 85,000 employees are reluctant to make choices not in the “book”, according to former executives and employees. Airlines crave consistency, experts said, and United isn’t unique in its strict focus on rules.

...

People close to the company said it could have been avoided. At least some decisions that led to the crisis were fuelled by employees following rules, which are endemic to big, long-lived airlines and amount to giant manuals.

...

In hindsight, the gate agent should have said, “Folks, we’re not leaving until someone gets off. If someone doesn’t take the $US800, we’re going to cancel the flight,” said the United pilot.

...

Decades-old union conventions that enshrine seniority over performance are part of the problem, one former executive said, because employees are rewarded for their tenure rather than their talent.

Another former airline executive said he thought Mr Munoz, “didn’t realise how rule-based the employees are. The huge rule books need to be burned because crazy #### happens.”

United said no employees had been put on leave or terminated in connection with the incident, and it wasn’t aware of any dismissals at Republic Airways. The three law-enforcement officials employed by the Chicago Department of Aviation are on leave pending an investigation.

 
United said no employees had been put on leave or terminated in connection with the incident, and it wasn’t aware of any dismissals at Republic Airways.
One thing that has surprised me a lot is that:

a) nothing at all has apparently happened to any of the staff on the Dao flight. Not even paid suspension.

b) none of the United/Republic flight attendant names have been made public. I know those British tabloids would get that info if they wanted, so their must be some unspoken "hands off" policy at work.

 
Employees need to use common sense and when something doesn't pass the smell test ESCALATE and request an over ride. Not doing so is lazy and irresponsible. I don't know about you but I wouldn't want walking, talking zombie employees that simply point to policy and don't use common sense.

If UA's policy does not allow for an over ride from proper levels and if employees have no ability to question the application of the policy to a situation then their process is broken.


While procedures change to keep up with evolving safety and security protocols, streamlining the underlying bureaucracy can be a lower priority for an operations-focused carrier such as United. Deviating from the rules is frowned upon and employees can face termination for a foul-up, according to people familiar with the matter.

At United, this has helped ­create a rules-based culture where its 85,000 employees are reluctant to make choices not in the “book”, according to former executives and employees. Airlines crave consistency, experts said, and United isn’t unique in its strict focus on rules.
If the above is true then I can't blame the employees at the gate. It sounds like the word from higher up was not to ever analyze the situation, don't apply common sense and just stick to the plan for every and all situations. 

What a moronic way to run a company. If the philosophy is so rigid that you don't trust your employees to think and adjust it's only a matter of time before you have a disaster like this on your hands. UA needs to clean house at the executive level.

 
If the above is true then I can't blame the employees at the gate. It sounds like the word from higher up was not to ever analyze the situation, don't apply common sense and just stick to the plan for every and all situations. 

What a moronic way to run a company. If the philosophy is so rigid that you don't trust your employees to think and adjust it's only a matter of time before you have a disaster like this on your hands. UA needs to clean house at the executive level.
I had a boss that thought like this, that there should be a rule for every situation with no deviation.  He was let go without any of us crying.

 
From today's Wall Street Journal -- subscription-free reprint link here:

In hindsight, the gate agent should have said, “Folks, we’re not leaving until someone gets off. If someone doesn’t take the $US800, we’re going to cancel the flight,” said the United pilot.
What sense does that make? The whole reason for the problem was that they had to get crew to Kentucky on that flight, as they had (for whatever reason) decided that was the quickest way to transport those workers. Cancelling the flight wasn't an option and would have been an obviously empty threat. Genius suggestion pilot braino. The gate agent should have just kept upping the compensation amount until someone volunteered. Problem solved.

 
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Buzzbait said:
If the above is true then I can't blame the employees at the gate. It sounds like the word from higher up was not to ever analyze the situation, don't apply common sense and just stick to the plan for every and all situations. 

What a moronic way to run a company. If the philosophy is so rigid that you don't trust your employees to think and adjust it's only a matter of time before you have a disaster like this on your hands. UA needs to clean house at the executive level.
Why do people want to point the finger at employees? If the situation was caused by some rogue employee doing something they shouldn't have done, then that's management's fault for poor training or hiring practices. If the situation was caused by employees doing what they're told, then that's management's fault for poor policies. When a company screws up it's always management's fault. That's the #### you accept when going into management. If you go into management thinking you can blame your employees for business failures, then you shouldn't be in management. 

 
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Why do people want to point the finger at employees? If the situation was caused by some rogue employee doing something they shouldn't have done, then that's management's fault for poor training or hiring practices. If the situation was caused by employees doing what they're told, then that's management's fault for poor policies. When a company screws up it's always management's fault. That's the #### you accept when going into management. If you go into management thinking you can blame your employees for business failures, then you shouldn't be in management. 
I didn't know what UA had trained/allowed their employees to do in these types of situations. If the answer were that they afforded them quite a bit of latitude and the employee didn't exercise common sense then I'd have no problem blaming the gate employee for being lazy and not thinking thru options. As it stands it appears that UA handcuffed their employees and would rather they simply follow a flowchart. That being the case UA management is at fault for this mess by not allowing their employees to use their brain and consider other options.

 
I didn't know what UA had trained/allowed their employees to do in these types of situations. If the answer were that they afforded them quite a bit of latitude and the employee didn't exercise common sense then I'd have no problem blaming the gate employee for being lazy and not thinking thru options. As it stands it appears that UA handcuffed their employees and would rather they simply follow a flowchart. That being the case UA management is at fault for this mess by not allowing their employees to use their brain and consider other options.
You are supposed to escalate in that situation, not think on your feet.  Find a supervisor, or call the panic line.  Without knowing a damn thing about UA I am 100% for sure they have a panic line for this type of situation.

 
Buzzbait said:
If the above is true then I can't blame the employees at the gate. It sounds like the word from higher up was not to ever analyze the situation, don't apply common sense and just stick to the plan for every and all situations. 

What a moronic way to run a company. If the philosophy is so rigid that you don't trust your employees to think and adjust it's only a matter of time before you have a disaster like this on your hands. UA needs to clean house at the executive level.
RE: rigidity, only a Sith deals in absolutes. But (in addition to the potential positives) I would hope you can also see the danger in giving low level, customer-facing personnel too much authority to act on behalf of the company. You keep saying "common sense" in your posts. Certainly, you realize not everyone has the same amount of common sense nor applies it uniformly. What happens when Gloria "I gots muh GED!" the Gate Agent decides its appropriate to add an extra half a grand to someone's check because its snowing in the layover city and that poor passenger doesn't have a winter coat? You (as mgmt) don't want your GAs doing stuff like that, do you? But can you really reprimand her much if she's just using the discretion you gave her? Also, believe it or not, not everyone is honest. What happens when some of your people take advantage of their empowerment by running a scam whereby they tip off their friends as to which flights are routinely oversold (so those people can buy a ticket) then they pick those same friends for IDB and cut 'em a fat check for their "trouble"? Or the GA starts colluding with random passengers to split the "proceeds"? These are obviously intentionally extreme hypotheticals but I think you get the point. There is a good reason companies put policy in place and its largely to limit the amount of thinking their people need to do and give them the least privilege necessary to get the job done. In the case of an airline, time is always of the essence. They need people to know what they are supposed to do in situations, act quickly, and keep schedules. The more that is left to individual discretion, the longer decisions take and higher the likelihood of inconsistency. 

With the benefit of hindsight, you're looking at one event (that went very badly) out of hundreds of thousands, calling it obvious, and saying the exception should be the rule. All the airlines play the same game. All day, every day. Millions of people fly every year. Every passenger agrees to it (when they buy their ticket) and thousands are VDB and IDB. The incident on that United plane on 4/9 (which I fully understand was not technically oversold) is the only time its blown up so badly. And it took a perfect storm for that to happen. And (at the end of the day) one man got his bell rung and lost a couple chicklets. Nobody died. He'll be just fine. Not trying to be insensitive to Dao nor say the goal shouldn't always be to minimize the chances of negative incidents. But show me an industry that deals more directly with as many customers (and has as many moving parts) that doesn't have some negative incidents. People are wildcards. As long as people are involved, there is always the chance something goes haywire. Organizations put policy in place to try to take some of the wild out of it. Sometimes, #### still blows up.

 
Doug B said:
One thing that has surprised me a lot is that:

a) nothing at all has apparently happened to any of the staff on the Dao flight. Not even paid suspension.

b) none of the United/Republic flight attendant names have been made public. I know those British tabloids would get that info if they wanted, so their must be some unspoken "hands off" policy at work.
Why would United suspend anyone? Their staff followed procedure.

 
RE: rigidity, only a Sith deals in absolutes. But (in addition to the potential positives) I would hope you can also see the danger in giving low level, customer-facing personnel too much authority to act on behalf of the company. 
Unfortunately the bolded is not true. Too many times in business I've seen/experienced situations where decisions are made in absolutes which is one of the points I'm trying to make.

Yes..of course I see the danger in giving an employee too much authority. What I'm advocating is a middle ground. Give the employee enough leeway to enable them to make an educated decision within the parameters of company guidelines. Too much authority or too little can both be a bad thing.

You keep saying "common sense" in your posts. Certainly, you realize not everyone has the same amount of common sense nor applies it uniformly. What happens when Gloria "I gots muh GED!" 
Yes, I've brought that up numerous time. You point that out like it's a bad thing.

Again, as I stated above, I'm not advocating giving an employee who "got's her GED" absolutely authority. That would be ridicules. An employee needs to be able to do his/her job within parameters that align responsibility, training and experience that allow them to do their job.

 

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