Those
who say we should run government like a business must not be frequent flyers.
Flying,
which was once a fairly good experience, now amounts to being herded, harassed,
barked at, and squeezed — while being dunned every step of the way for onerous
fees. Make a reservation? Do it yourself, or pay extra. Check a bag? The fee
for that is so pricey that most passengers have had to turn themselves into
mules, toting their full load on board — which the airlines view as a new fee
opportunity, planning to charge us for storing the stuff we schlep onto the
plane.
Yes! Here's the CEO of Ryanair in
Europe: "One thing we are looking at again is the possibility of maybe
putting a coin slot on the toilet door." After all, mused another Ryanair
exec, a toilet tax would be voluntary, since passengers have the option of not
using the toilet.
Even
though the airlines are in the black again and keep raising their ticket prices
(three times this year alone), they still keep jacking up fees...because they
can. It's free money they can simply lift out of travelers' wallets.
"We're all about finding ways of raising discretionary revenue,"
gloated the chief of Ryanair.
Nearly
every airline these days is addicted to fees, and the already huge take is
growing — these add-ons will pluck $36 billion dollars from us customers
this year, $4 billion more than last year.
Is
there a tipping point at which consumer grumbling about these gouges turns to
rebellion? A group called AirFareWatchDog.com thinks so. Noting that airlines
are making profits again, it reports that the flying public has had it up to
here with fees. Delta, for one, has responded. Not by cutting fees, but by
excluding from its public reports the full amount of fee revenue it takes from
us.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Southwest Airlines just signed a settlement agreement where they promise to provide 5.8 million dollars in free drinks to passengers (valued at approximately $29 million. The lawsuit they settled was over the airline's decision not to honor free drink vouchers it had given customers. Click here for details.
Jim Hightower is
a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker. He's also editor of the
populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown.
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)