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Spirit Airlines' boss calls complaints 'irrelevant,' says dying veteran should've bought insurance
FoxNews.com ^ | 5-13-2012 | Joshua Rhett Miller

Posted on 05/03/2012 1:42:07 PM PDT by servo1969

The boss of Spirit Airlines isn't about to cave in to a dying former Marine, and he doesn't lose sleep knowing his company leads the industry when it comes to customer complaints, he told FoxNews.com.

“That’s an irrelevant statistic,” Spirit CEO Ben Baldanza said when told his airline generates gripes at two-and-a-half times the rate of the next most complained about carrier.

Spirit racked up 8.27 complaints per 100,000 passengers in January, while United finished a distant second-worst, registering 3.5 complaints per 100,000 fliers, according to U.S. Department of Transportation statistics. By comparison, Southwest notched just 0.2 complaints per 100,000 fliers.

Spirit is generating complaints at a much faster clip on Facebook, where a "Boycott Spirit Airlines" page has seen its number of "likes" soar to more than 21,000 from about 700 since the carrier denied a $197 refund to Jerry Meekins. The 76-year-old Vietnam veteran and former Marine tried to get his $197 back after learning his esophageal cancer is terminal and being told by his doctor not to fly from Florida to Atlantic City. Airline officials told him to forget it, and Baldanza reaffirmed the company's hardline in an exclusive FoxNews.com interview.

“A lot of our customers buy that insurance and what Mr. Meekins asked us to do was essentially give him the benefit of that insurance when he didn’t purchase the insurance,” Baldanza said. “Had we done that, I think it really would’ve been cheating all the people who actually bought the insurance … and I think that’s fundamentally unfair.”

(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: airline; airtravel; cancer; refund; veteran
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To: kcvl

I bet he gets up tomorrow morning looking in the mirror to shave and says DUMBASS!


41 posted on 05/03/2012 3:32:07 PM PDT by HANG THE EXPENSE (Life's tough.It's tougher when you're stupid.)
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To: servo1969

I was flying back to Iraq after leave and Delta move me into first class. I was in my BDU’s There is a difference in airlines so I fly Delta if there a choice.


42 posted on 05/03/2012 3:36:00 PM PDT by jesseam
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To: servo1969
In short, this is a classic case of “Pennywise, Pound foolish.”

Amen. $197 by orders of magnitude is what he's going to have to pay some PR firm to haul his sorry behind out of the debacle he's mouthed himself into. Sometimes "the principle of the thing" is not the same as "doing the right thing."

43 posted on 05/03/2012 3:36:28 PM PDT by Hoffer Rand (There ARE two Americas: "God's children" and the tax payers)
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To: servo1969

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2103695/Southwest-Airlines-desirable-brand-America.html


44 posted on 05/03/2012 3:46:07 PM PDT by radar101
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To: servo1969
guess nobody ever told the fool you have to pick your battles, $197 is one hell of a small hill to die on... make that mole hill
45 posted on 05/03/2012 3:58:09 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist - *DTOM* -ww- NO Pity for the LAZY)
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To: packrat35

Totally.


46 posted on 05/03/2012 4:33:24 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously, you won't live through it anyway)
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To: servo1969

47 posted on 05/03/2012 4:42:02 PM PDT by Brandonmark (2012: Our Hope IS Change!)
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To: servo1969

This publicity makes me aware of Spirit for the first time. It makes me realize that they have low fares, and don’t bow to every pressure tactic for certain sympathetic people. Good for them. Just because you’re old, or dying doesn’t mean you can pick the pocket of a company I might wish to patronize.


48 posted on 05/03/2012 4:46:33 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Hold My Beer and Watch This!)
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To: VideoDoctor

The $197 dollar refund, plus, throw in a free trip anywhere that Spirit flies, and they would have gotten a MILLION dollars plus of FAVORABLE warm fuzzy publicity. Powerful positive branding.


You don’t get free publicity for giving in to a whining old coot.


49 posted on 05/03/2012 5:20:56 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Hold My Beer and Watch This!)
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To: servo1969

Spirit has every right to withhold the fare
And I and thousands of others have the right to seek out other carriers.

bye bye now spirit airlines.


50 posted on 05/03/2012 5:23:24 PM PDT by tweakDU (Someday karma will run over leftist dogma.)
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To: servo1969

I presume they generate millions in profits on the insurance premiums (also known as higher refundable fares).

If they publicly give in, lots of people will decide not to pay the premium, on the assumption that they can wine loudly enough for a freebie.

Doesn’t EVERYBODY know about non-refundable fares?


51 posted on 05/03/2012 5:24:26 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Hold My Beer and Watch This!)
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To: servo1969
From: Spirit Airlines Contract of Carriage

Spirit’s Commitment:

When our Customers have complaints, we will respond with the required information in a professional, courteous manner that reflects the high value we place on each Customer.

You may contact Spirit with your complaints (or questions) in the following ways:

1. Via e-mail

spirit@mailmw.custhelp.com

2. In Writing

Spirit Customer Relations
2800 Executive Way
Miramar, FL 33025

You will receive an initial acknowledgement of your communications within 30 days and a substantive reply within 60 days.

http://www.spirit.com/content/documents/en-us/Contract_of_Carriage.pdf

52 posted on 05/03/2012 5:29:17 PM PDT by Brandonmark (2012: Our Hope IS Change!)
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To: Beelzebubba; servo1969
I have a bit of a problem with this story on several levels.

First of all, I think the refusal is a public relations nightmare. They could have gotten some goodwill by backing down and in hindsight, probably will wish they would have.

But OTOH, if this is their policy and the policy is known and in writing that the person acknowledges it when the person purchases the ticket and it is further known that there will be no refunds or exchanges under any circumstances what so ever unless the additional $14 flight insurance is purchased, and they treat everybody exactly the same, i.e. not refusing to make an exception in Mr. Meekins’ case where they have made similar exceptions for others; then I’m having a bit of a hard time seeing why this is so outrageous.

Yes, Mr. Meekins is surely a sympathetic character; a former cop, a Vietnam veteran, a cancer patient. So are a lot of other people too; a lot probably just as deserving, and some perhaps not so much. If Spirit publically makes an exception for him, how many others will want their “exceptions” too?

But then there is also something about this story that doesn’t quite make sense to me, doesn’t pass the ‘ole “smell test”.

So after Mr. Meekins, who has been battling his cancer for many years BTW, purchased his ticket and supposedly already knowing how sick he was, refused to buy for a mere $14 more, the insurance that would have allowed him to exchange or get a refund for his ticket for “unforeseen circumstances”, and two weeks later his doctor supposedly told him he couldn’t fly because of his cancer, his “compromised immune system”, that he was “too sick to fly”. Yet he was able to drive himself from his home in Florida to visit with his “sick” daughter in New Jersey before her surgery and was also able to make the trip into NYC to make a personal appearance on Fox and Friends.

I’m sorry, but I really have to question just how sick he really is and what sort of doctor would tell him that it’s not OK for him to fly; to take a +/- two hour flight, yet was perfectly OK with him making a 10 to 12 + hour drive on his own, by himself to visit his “sick” daughter and then drive into NYC and meet and shake hands with the TV hosts? Really?

We might want to paint the Spirit Airlines CEO as a mean “spirited” SOB, but here is what he said:

A lot of our customers buy that insurance and what Mr. Meekins asked us to do was essentially give him the benefit of that insurance when he didn’t purchase the insurance,” Baldanza told FoxNews.com by phone. “Had we done that, I think it really would’ve been cheating all the people who actually bought the insurance … and I think that’s fundamentally unfair.”

Baldanza said the $14 insurance covers a “wide range of unexpected events” and would have enabled Meekins to recoup his money.

Ben Baldanza acknowledged the “tragic situation” of Jerry Meekins, 76, of Clearwater, Fla., who has terminal esophageal cancer, but stood his ground on nixing the Vietnam vet's request. Making an exception would be like an insurance company paying to fix a fire-ravaged home even though the owner didn't have a policy before the fire, he said.

The Florida-based budget carrier offered Meekins a credit voucher that would have enabled him to change the flight for a fee, Baldanza said, but the former police officer solely wanted a cash refund.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/05/03/spirit-airlines-ceo-dying-veteran-didnt-get-refund-because-didnt-buy-insurance/

So in other words, Spirit Airlines is willing to let him change the flight - I’m guessing that also means changing the name on the ticket to be used by someone else, something he (Meekins) said he wanted the airline to do, for a fee of $14, the cost of the insurance after the fact, that if he had purchased when he initially bought the ticket, would have enabled him to do that in the first place. So for a lousy $14 that the buyer could have purchased, we beating the band for this business to go out of business?

And I’m pretty sure that driving from FL to NJ and then into NYC cost a lot more than $197. So for Mr. Meekins it’s not about him needing the $ and this all seems to be about “principle” and that’s what Spirit Airlines is claiming as well.

I’m rather inclined to side with the company on this one.

53 posted on 05/03/2012 5:53:56 PM PDT by MD Expat in PA
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To: kcvl

All the dam fool had to do was to refund the money after the man signed a non-disclosure agreement. What an idiot.


54 posted on 05/03/2012 5:59:26 PM PDT by SgtHooper (The last thing I want to do is hurt you. But it's still on the list.)
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To: Beelzebubba
You don’t get free publicity for giving in to a whining old coot

You don't have to admit you love your mother on the day you bury her either.

My point: "Service is light. Follow it."

55 posted on 05/03/2012 6:02:55 PM PDT by VideoDoctor
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To: servo1969
A business has to operate in the real world. Your customers are people. Treat enough of them like garbage and they’ll be happy to take their patronage elsewhere. In short, this is a classic case of “Pennywise, Pound foolish.”

You know, at first glance it would appear exactly as you describe. But think about it for a moment and perhaps you can agree with his philosophy and actions. First, he is, as you mentioned, on firm legal grounds - the Marine did not purchase insurance and so has no legal claim. Second, paying the Marine does indeed cheat those people who DID buy insurance.

But the larger narrative in this is that perhaps our fellow Americans are getting tired of the 'Customer is always right' mantra. Because if you roll over for ALL customers, most of them suffer for the orneriness of the few. It really grates on me, and I don't think I am alone in this, when I see airline personnel attempting to satisfy the unreasonable demands of an ignorant or thoughtless passenger when I am next in line. The fact that the Marine has a compelling story is incidental except for women and man-boys. I applaud this CEO for standing up for the rule of law and not the tyranny of the minority, believe it is good business decision, and would be surprised if this did not enhance the bottom line of his airline.

56 posted on 05/03/2012 10:56:49 PM PDT by SandwicheGuy (*The butter acts as a lubricant and speeds up the CPU*ou)
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To: SandwicheGuy
But the larger narrative in this is that perhaps our fellow Americans are getting tired of the 'Customer is always right' mantra. Because if you roll over for ALL customers, most of them suffer for the orneriness of the few.

What you said!

I used to work full time in retail many years ago and in recent years, part time on a seasonal basis for the extra $$.

When a retail store has a policy that clearly states, “no returns without a receipt” and “no returns after 90’s days” or “you will only get store credit for returns without receipts and then only for the most recent or mark down price” or “you cannot return video games or movies that have been opened, the seal having been broken, unless the game or movie is defective” it really means what it says and for good reason.

There are sometimes compelling reasons why a store manager might make an occasional exception but then I saw customers trying to return items without a receipt for a cash refund that were items our store didn’t even sell. When I worked at “We Be Babies” I had customers try to return items with the Target or Wal-Mart tags still on them. I had a customer try to return a 50 pack box of diapers that only had 5 diapers left and tried to claim other ones were all defective and then after we explained why they couldn’t be returned, claimed they should be able to return them because they were the wrong size and was irate when we wouldn’t give him a refund. Similarly, one time a customer tried to return baby sleepers that had stains on them and had obviously been laundered and tried to claim they were a gift and were the wrong size.

One time I dealt with a very hostile and nasty customer who ordered custom finished baby furniture and after taking delivery, assembling it and using for several months, tried to return it because their mother in law decided to buy her a “nicer” set. In fact it wasn’t usual for new moms to bring in several bags of items they got at their baby shower, none of them with the original tags, didn’t have receipts or gift receipts or even items on their baby registry, presuming they even had one and then had us go through each item and determine if it was even an item we sold and then bitch at us because the item was currently on a clearance markdown or discontinued or out of season and they thought, often even demanded that they should get the original retail value.

In my experience most customers are reasonable and understanding when the policy is explained and most companies will make some attempt to accommodate a reasonable request (something I think Spirit did by offering to let him exchange or transfer his ticket for a small fee – presumably the $14 dollars for the insurance that he could have and should have purchased in the first place). But let there be no mistake. When a retailer takes back an item they don’t sell and can’t resell or send back to the manufacturer, takes back a used item that is not defective but now otherwise rendered unsellable, gives a customer the original retail price on a returned item without a receipt and purchased who knows how long ago that now cannot be resold at that price, all just to make the customer “happy”, the company loses money and guess who pays for it? We all do.

57 posted on 05/04/2012 6:01:05 PM PDT by MD Expat in PA
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