They could have - flown those 4 employees on other airlines. They could have rented a car and driven them to Louisville. They could have offered more actual money (not vouchers). They could have offered seats on other competing airlines. They could have done any number of things besides what they did. But they chose for whatever reason to physically drag a man down the aisle of a plane with a bloody face. When is saying no considered unruly and belligerent. When did we become so afraid of (who exactly are we afraid of - airlines? govt? police?) whomever that we simply go along with whatever because someone in a uniform wants us to.
Because we live in a civilized society with rules & regulations? And, hopefully, not all of us have "it's all about me" attitudes.
If I had been on the plane & it had been my name, I would have been beyond annoyed, but I would have gotten up. I wouldn't just sit there & refuse to move. And there's no way I'm going to be dragged down the aisle of a plane. Would anyone here have refused to get up?
Of course, they could have done a million different things. But they didn't.
Good customer service? No. But that's a completely different topic. I think it's awful how good customer service has declined, & I think airlines are some of the worst when it comes to good customer service. Obviously, things need to change, & better policies should be in place.
But, regardless, they informed him that his name had come up & regrettably he'd have to deboard. He refused & wouldn't budge from his seat.
What a stubborn, entitled attitude! (And I don't think his screaming sounded panicked. It sounded crazy.) I'm sorry. I'm not a fan of people who think rules don't apply to them & think that causing scenes will get them their way.
And, yes, United has lost millions over this. I'm not surprised. We live in social media viral world w/ lots of social justice warriors.
And, again, I'm not saying United shouldn't have handled it a million different ways. I'm not saying the employees don't need training on how to handle situations like this.
I'm not saying they were necessarily right. There were probably better solutions. United was crazy & had to know how this whole thing would blow up.
I just don't understand what United was supposed to do once he refused. Just continue to hold the plane up? "Okay, sir, you won't do it for $800. How about $1,000? Not $1,000? How's $1,500? Not that either. Well, okay then. Let's just sit here for a while."
Yes, they might have been wrong for allowing the situation to get to that point, but, for whatever reason, it did get to the point they were randomly bumping people off a loaded plane.
United may have been wrong in allowing the situation to get the point it did, but the passenger was wrong too.