SueM in MN said:
I would definately suggest you ask to preboard - don't assume they will see the wheelchair
I can vouch for this! It wasn't Southwest, but a Skycap took me in a wheelchair from the curb to my gate; went to the Gate Agent and told him I was there and needed to preboard; and left me fifteen feet from the counter, straight on to the GA's line of vision. He forgot me, fine, but also didn't SEE me

the response given to a very kind passenger. So about a third of the way through boarding, they had to stop everyone for me. I'm thinking it was on Song, and I generally got a seat assignment in row 8, immediately to the left of the door, so it's not like it took long.
English Rose 47 said:
I just don,t think they should allow the extende family to preboardwhen there are so many others with young kids too who are just a little over 4. I will definately try for the A pass and get there as early as we can.
A very valid point of view... you do realize that YOU would be considered 'extended family', right? That even if one of your grandchildren was under the typical preboard age, since you're not the mother or the father you could not preboard with them?
bookgirl2632 said:
Honest and realistic. Most of us here fly one to four times a year, or even less frequently. Several regular posters, on the other hand, fly regularly as part of their jobs - in addition to flying for vacation. Their experience and viewpoints are extremely helpful.
Frankly, what I find interesting is the DISers who have this wonderful source of knowledge and information - the DIS boards, not any specific poster - yet still post defensively on various topics. I believe
we all have far less reason to panic, or even just complain, than a passenger or family who DOESN'T think to use the Internet to obtain advance information, instead showing up at the airport 45 minutes before the plane takes off and expecting everything to be exactly as they want. We've GOT the knowledge, we CAN plan ahead. English Rose is going online 24 hours in advance to get her Southwest boarding passes. That's the smart process. She's not going to get to the airport and obtain boarding passes there and then be angry or demanding because she expects all five of them to be able to sit together and everyone on the plane should move to accommodate them.
disneyldwjr said:
What I don't get is the entitlement mentality that some possess. When you buy a ticket for a flight you are entitled to a seat for that flight. You are NOT entitled to seats together. You are not entitled to make others move, you are not entitled to get nasty towards others because they had the foresight to check in early, arrive early, be seated early and refuse to move because you did not have the aforementioned foresight.
You are also not entitled to teach, coach, coerce, etc. your child/ren to cry, whine, bawl, misbehave, or act in any offensive manner in an attempt to get an already-seated passenger to give up the seat they chose before you boarded (disclaimer: "you" does not refer to any specific person, on or not on this message board).
scammermom said:
So a person might have a 5 or so year old who isn't attached with an umbilical cord who may have gotten to the boarding late for whatever reason like maybe taking child to the restroom before the flight or getting something to eat or whatever.
None of those is a valid reason for getting to the gate late. There are restrooms in the gate area; there is generally food available in the gate area; getting food does absolutely NOT take precedence over being in the gate area, waiting to board the plane by the time required by the airline. "Oh, listen, they're starting to board our flight - quick, we'd better go get a hamburger first"???? And there are bathrooms ON the plane, which can be used as soon as you board - you don't need to wait until the plane is in the air and the seatbelt sign is off.
scammermom said:
Sometimes people are late and it's not their fault like the transport was late or broke down.
Those scenarios are
also not the airline's fault, and they're
also not the fault of the other passengers who did manage to get to the airport enough in advance. Most airports advise arriving at least an hour, more often two or more, before your flight - late transportation should still get you there in time, and a breakdown if you leave the house three hours before flight time allows you time to find alternate transportation as well.