Ding Dong wrote:
Quote:
I was bumped once by TACA and forced to wait 24 hours in the Miami airport before I could get on another flight (they only have 2 per day and the morning one was filled).
All airlines, even foreign flagged carriers, flying into US ports are
required to comply with denied boarding regulations.
If they were unable to accommodate you on another flight, theirs or another carrier, for 24 hours you should have received some great compensation.
Actually, I didn't tell the whole story and it wasn't really all their fault. I had booked a flight to Miami seperately on AA. That flight was late getting to Miami as a result I got to the TACA counter 1:59 hours before departure and was told I could not get on the flight because it was less than 2 hours. I had no check-in baggage and probably could have made it through security with time to spare but no dice. The counter person was not too helpful. He did get me a confirmed seat on the next evening flight. But wouldn't automatically put me on a standby list for the next morning. I had to show up 3 hours or less before flight time or sometime after 4AM. First they tell me I had to be there more than 2 hours before flight time if I had a ticket and then they tell I couldn't be there more than 3 hours before if I didn't

. They even hit me with a reticketing charge for going on the later flight. The only semi-bright spot was that AA picked up the tab for a room at the airport hotel for the night. They couldn't pull any strings with TACA since it was on a seperate ticket. Unfortunately, I didn't get much sleep since I had to get up so early for my subsequently failed attempt to make it on the morning flight. All in all not the most pleasant experince I ever had with an airline.