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  • 16
    Dec
    2012
    9:07am, EST

    Southwest to charge customers who don't show up

    By NBCDFW.com

    Southwest Airlines customers will soon pay a fee for not canceling a ticket before their flight.

    The airline outlined the new policy Friday at an investors' conference in New York.

    Read this and other stories at NBCDFW.com

    Right now, Southwest lets passengers who don't use their ticket apply the price toward a new ticket. Southwest says it can reduce no-shows and generate more revenue by adding the cancellation fee on restricted tickets.

    Company officials said the new fee will start next year, but they didn't give an exact date or say how much the fee will be.

    Southwest also plans to increase fees it already charges, such as for early check-in and overweight bags. Its AirTran Airways subsidiary will raise bag fees in February. 

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    179 comments

    Pretty soon they'll start charging fees for flying with the competition. LOL

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, airline, consumer, southwest, aviation, nbcdfw-com, nbcdfw
  • 27
    Jul
    2012
    3:40pm, EDT

    Airlines offer Aurora victims' families free trips to Denver International

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    As the families of last Friday's theater shooting victims jet across the country to attend memorial services for their loved ones, major airlines that serve the Denver area are offering some financial relief.

    United Airlines, which has a hub at Denver International, is providing free air travel to the Mile High City for victims' families from outside Colorado, The Denver Post reported. Aurora, one of Denver's largest suburbs, is located about 18 miles from the airport.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS


    "All of us were impacted by these events, and we want to help in any way we can," the airline told The Denver Post.

    An uncle of 27-year-old victim Alex Sullivan reportedly thanked United on Facebook for accommodating about 25 family members to attend funeral services in Denver — many of whom live in Rochester, N.Y.

    Southwest Airlines also serves Denver, and the Dallas-based carrier is giving families complimentary travel to Colorado. "We provided travel for the families of the victims and we’re working closely with local partners to accommodate their needs at this time," Southwest spokesperson Michelle Agnew said in a statement. Southwest is "available to help as many families as needed," she said.

    Denver-based Frontier Airlines is doing the same. "As we are based in Colorado, you can imagine how many of us were impacted by last Friday’s events," airline spokesperson Lindsey Carpenter said in a statement. "We are just glad we can be of help to our grieving neighbors."

    The Colorado Organization for Victim Assistance, a victims advocacy group, is working with the families and airlines to book these flights.

    This move by the travel industry comes alongside news that some Colorado hospitals are limiting or waiving victims' medical bills.

    The July 20 shooting at an Aurora, Colo. movie theater left 12 dead and 58 injured.

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    12 comments

    Outstanding action!!!! Nice to see kindness happen.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: united, airlines, denver, southwest, denver-international-airport, frontier, aurora, theater-shooting
  • 22
    Apr
    2012
    10:12am, EDT

    Triple digit temps in Southwest -- and it's still April

    By Tim Ballisty, weather.com meteorologist

    It's only April, but some extreme heat has arrived over the Southwest U.S. this weekend.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Why is this happening? A major upper-level ridge of high pressure has taken up shop across the region.

    This upper ridge provides subsidence or sinking air. Sinking air actually compresses and pressure builds. This build-up in pressure leads to an air mass temperature increase.


    We are forecasting high temperatures in the Desert Southwest to reach the upper 90s and triple-digits; coming close to or exceeding the record highs for the date in some cities.

    Cities that could break their daily record highs this weekend including Phoenix, Yuma, Tucson and Las Vegas.

    Before this weekend, Phoenix had not reached the century mark in 2012. The average first 100-degree reading comes around May 2. Last year, the city first hit 100 degrees on April 1.

    The major warmth won't only be confined to the Southwest but also permeate into the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys of California (Sacramento, Fresno) and also into the heart of the intermountain West (Salt Lake City, Grand Junction, Boise). In fact, record highs may be broken in the Pacific Northwest too including in Portland and Medford, Ore.

    Highs across the region are forecast to be 10 to 20 degrees above average.

    This intense heat will continue through at least the early part of the work week with some slight mitigation of the heat by midweek.

    Look for Wednesday highs in the 90s again in the Desert Southwest, mid to upper 70s in the Salt Lake Valley and 80s to near 90 on the Strip in Vegas.

    Will this pattern stick around? Unlike the previous pattern in place, this shift will be relatively short-lived. Computer weather models currently show the western ridge weakening as a new storm system approaches the California coast late Wednesday into Thursday.  

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    128 comments

    Dubsac20 and James1782939 , my partner (a well published research scientist) and many of his scientist colleagues and friends along with a clutch of statisticians have- on their own unpaid time and out of deep interest in the science, protocol, methods, and data- looked at this issue and reviewed pu …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, heat, southwest, featured
  • 22
    Dec
    2011
    1:28pm, EST

    Southwest mix-up leaves 9-year-old stranded for five hours

    Southwest Airlines had to re-route a plane due to bad weather, sending an unaccompanied 9-year-old girl to the wrong state without contacting her family. WVIT's Amanda Raus reports.

    By Harriet Baskas, NBC News contributor

    Southwest Airlines is apologizing to a Clarksville, Tenn., family and investigating how a 9-year-old girl flying as an unaccompanied minor from Nashville to New York on Tuesday ended up re-routed and delayed for five hours without the airline notifying the family.

    Chloe Boyce is fine and will be getting a special patch from her junior Girl Scout troop to mark her adventure, but her mom, Elena Kerr, is upset.

    “The flight arrived and my daughter didn’t get off,” Kerr told msnbc.com. “Someone went on the plane to see if she was there and my sister called me and said, ‘Where’s Chloe?’ The Southwest guys told her there were no unaccompanied minors on that flight.”

    Kerr had put Chloe on a flight in Nashville headed for New York’s LaGuardia Airport with scheduled stops in Columbus and Baltimore.

    Southwest's policy only allows unaccompanied children to be booked on itineraries that don’t include plane changes. Chloe's flight, however, made an extra stop in Cleveland due to weather, and upon arriving in Baltimore she was rebooked on another flight to New York.

    Unfortunately, no one from the airline called Kerr to inform her of the delay. The airline also did not contact Chloe’s aunt, who was waiting at the gate in New York.

    Kerr said she started frantically calling Southwest and that it took more than an hour for the airline to locate Chloe and even longer to explain what happened.

    “At BWI, the flight attendant took her off the plane, walked her to Hudson News to get her a drink and some snacks and the pilot bought her dinner,” Kerr told msnbc.com. “But while she was there no could tell us where she was.”

    Kerr said she understands delays. “We just don’t understand why we weren’t called, especially because the Southwest policy states that someone must be available to answer phone calls during the flight time in the event of a flight irregularity.”

    Southwest Airlines has apologized to Kerr and refunded the cost of Chloe’s ticket.

    “Our unaccompanied minor policy aims to minimize these kinds of situations ... by only ticketing them on itineraries that don't require an aircraft change,” said Southwest spokesperson Brad Hawkins in an email to msnbc.com. “In this case, the unscheduled change of planes resulted in the connection, a delay and distress for the family which we certainly regret and have apologized for in our conversation with the family of our customer.”

    Kerr is not convinced she should let Chloe fly alone again.

    “I’m going to be driving the 17 hours to New York to get her,” she said.

    Related stories:

    • When your child flies alone
    • Holiday travel: not so hellish after all?
    • Great gear for kids on the go

    Find more by Harriet Baskas on StuckatTheAirport.com and follow her on Twitter.

     

    315 comments

    She SHOULDN'T let Chloe fly alone again. Any responsible parent would travel with their children in this day and age. I know I would fly with mine, be them 9 or 19.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: southwest, featured, flying

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