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O.T. A day at the airport.
"Harry Krause" wrote in message United acted as it did, "knowing we would oversell the flight." All flights are oversold, because the industry has learned over the last forty years or so that American travellers are predictably unreliable about showing up. The various airlines are usually quite accurate in their predictions, but anomalies arise from time to time. If United gave a crap, it would have made another plane available, or it wouldn't have overbooked so drastically. Contrary to popularly held myth, there usually isn't another plane available. You simply don't keep a 20M asset lying around a non-hub in case something comes up. If the occasion arises at a hub, you may be able to jockey things and cover an additional flight, but it is not likely. If you latch onto a craft that is scheduled to leave 2 hours from now, the downline ramifications of such a decision could disrupt your network for days and possible cost millions. JG |
O.T. A day at the airport.
OK, I'll rephrase for the benefit of those who are unable to interpolate
rational detail: Most flights are allowed to be oversold. Some few flights in specific high-traffic markets have predictable high show rates, and their allowed overbooking percentage is usually very low. Other flight segments rarely if ever fill up at certain times or on certain days, so clearly there is no need for any overbooking policy there. "bb" wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 Nov 2003 10:45:45 -0500, "John Gaquin" wrote: All flights are oversold, Interesting. I've been on flights that only had 10 or 15 people on them. Musta been a lot of no shows. bb |
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