« Tech Talk: People as Medium | Main | Return of the MacBook »

Don't fly Delta from JFK

For my brief jaunt to California I decided on a Delta flight from JFK airport. Bad idea. Very bad idea. Exceedingly-bad idea.

Don't ever take a Delta flight from JFK. Ever.

JFK is known for having pretty good terminals, clean and fairly large. All except for Delta. Delta lives in Terminal 3, the Terminal That Time Forgot. It's an itty-bitty terminal that surely was meant for nothing larger than puddlejumper airlines.

I'd taken the subway to the AirTrain, and took it to Terminal 3. Now, in every other terminal, you walk across a bridge, perhaps take an escalator or two, and you're at ticketing. But not Terminal 3. When you leave the Terminal 3 AirTrain station, you're at ground level on a sidewalk. Task one: figure out where to go. There are a few signs posted, but not clearly, and if you're not paying attention, you'll be lost. Task two: don't get run over. Following the signs leads you on a path. There is no sidewalk. You'll be sharing the road with cars, so please be careful. Task three: pull your luggage a quarter mile uphill. Seriously. The path to the terminal is up an incline. I hope you didn't pack very heavily.

I hadn't, actually. For the two week trip, I'd decided to try going carry-on only. Yes, I'd have to do some laundry while I was there, but it was worth a try. I thus was able to make it to the terminal building. Where there are maybe four ticket counters.

The inside was mobbed. About a hundred passengers with luggage were crammed into a space roughly triple the size of my living room. It was 50 minutes to the flight, and with only two agents helping check people in, I didn't have a chance. After a few moments, though, I spied some e-ticket machines off on the side, marked “Carry-On Only”. I quickly took the opportunity to check in, grateful that I'd packed for carry-on, as it was the only thing that allowed me to catch my flight.

Of course, on the way back, I couldn't carry on my luggage. Not because of any increase in its size, but the fact that I didn't feel like throwing out all my liquid toiletries. So I checked the suitcase, and got on the flight. For all the commotion about increased security, things went fine. Until I arrived at Delta's Terminal From Hell.

There were two luggage carousels, D1, and D2. There were perhaps a hundred people waiting for D1 to start spitting out their luggage. There was a waist-high pile of luggage taking up half the room around my carousel, carousel D2. I looked at the ticket on one of the suitcases going around the carousel and found that it wasn't from my flight. I looked briefly through the massive pile of suitcases, and to my horror found a few marked as being from my flight. What!? I quickly waded through the entire pile looking at all the bags to check to see if mine was there. It wasn't.

So I waited for my luggage to come. Occasionally some people from my flight spotted their luggage on the carousel and claimed it, but most of us just stood there. It was now 6 o'clock, and our slightly-ahead-of-time 5 o'clock arrival didn't matter anymore. There was no point in complaining, as there were already two dozen people in line for the Baggage Service Office. From the hundred people waiting at D1, they were the ones to stand in line at the office to find out how they were supposed to get their baggage. I overheard something about carousel D1 being broken.

I was only slightly more fortunate, for though I had a working carousel no new bags had shown up for twenty minutes. Clack, clack. Clack, clack.

About 6:30 the baggage attendant pulled the remaining bags off carousel D2. No one had claimed them because they weren't from our flight. So I took a moment to look at the bags in the pile. I counted bags from no fewer than eighteen different flights: DL 1864 (my flight), but also flights 518, 1803, 5278, 4964, 1819, 5297, 5236, 4763, 4997, 1448, 5373, 725, 5075, 872, 1861, 5518, and 5471. Exasperated, I joined the line to the service office, which now only had half-a-dozen people from my flight in it.

At 6:40 I got to the desk, where I gave my luggage claim ticket to the clerk. She tapped at the computer and said, “It's in the back; we couldn't get all of the bags onto the carousel.” She disappeared. I looked at the guide to describing lost luggage with two-digit codes. At 6:50 she finally returned with my bag, and I could leave.

I'm sure that Delta doesn't intend to alienate their customers by wasting their time with such amazingly bad experiences. It's probably Terminal 3 being too small for a real airline. Well, one thing I intend to do is never take a Delta flight out of JFK, and perhaps never take any of their flights again. Perhaps that'll help Delta with their space problem.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.drissman.com/cgi-sys/cgiwrap/drissman/mt/mt-tb.cgi/680

Comments

Last year, I had to book an emergency flight, for my dad, down to Florida. I looked at flights with Delta (I was trying to be as inexpensive as well). Well... noticing that all the flights had an on time performance rating, and all of the flights ranged in the 55-70% on time, I felt that flying delta wasn't a good idea... anywhere.

Delta should just go out of business. They employ the rudest, most incompetent representatives at JFK I have ever encountered. They should all be fired as they add no value and actually take value away from an already flailing airline. Beginning at check-in, all I got was attitude from the woman at the counter who actually sounded offended that I was asking her a few simple questions about my bag. I then arrived at the gate to see that the flight was delayed. The estimated departure kept getting pushed back, and finally as I happened to be glancing up at the monitor, it flashed "Cancelled" for about 5 seconds and then completely disappeared. There was no announcement whatsoever at the gate over the 3 hours we were all waiting. So everyone got in line at the counter at the gate to try to get rebooked. Meanwhile, there were four representatives behind the counter just talking amongst themselves and helping no one for at least 20 minutes, seemingly unfazed by the 50+ displaced passengers waiting in line. When I finally got up to the counter, the woman said that I had been automatically rebooked on a flight the next day out of Laguardia. And when I asked about the status of all of our checked bags (at JFK), I was told they were either going to be put on the next JFK flight to our destination or put back out on the baggage carousel in the next few hours, but they weren't sure. So I ended up just cancelling my weekend trip because it wasn't worth the time and hassle of dealing with more incompetent Delta airline employees.

My wife tried take a Delta flight from JFK to Seattle. They told her the flight was delayed until 5:50 p.m. and when she arrive at 3:45 p.m. they said the flight was closed. Then they wanted to charge her an extra $300 to get home. I think this must be a cheap way of bumping people. I later found out that the flight didn't leave till 5:32 p.m. DO NOT FLY DELTA.

Thank goodness someone else thinks the same thing! I thought I was crazy for a minute!

I flew via JFK with Delta on 8/24 and missed my connection to Madrid. Having to wait for 24 hours for another flight on your precious vacation time is one thing, but dealing with the incompetent staff almost put me over my limit. They ignored half the customers, told them "tough sh-t" in so many words. The supervisor with whom I tried to get a free hotel stay told me I was calling him a liar because the reason we were delayed was different than what his computer screen showed. The poor Indian couple next to me, who were not speaking English perfectly, were told by another Delta rep that his wife was stupid and not understanding what he was saying.

Calling customers stupid, etc... Is this the new era of customer service? Is this the future of the airline industry?

I am never flying via JFK again. I am amazed -- AMAZED -- that in a city such as NYC in a country as wealthy and efficient as the USA, we cannot even get flights in and out of a huge airport on time, fairly consistently. Sorry, but a 65%-ish success rate just does NOT cut it.

Hi, me and my family are going on a cruise in November from Puerto Rico. We're flying Delta on the way back. Is the bad service at JFK limited to outgoing flights? And is the Arrival time better than the estimated Departure times?(Can I expect to arrive on time?)

Post a comment