Checking more luggage is easy, right?
Aug. 18th, 2006 01:46 pmFun with luggage, UK edition:
from a blog discussion:
Marie Henley, together with her partner and one-year-old daughter, flew from Heathrow to Brussels on Friday, arriving back in London on Saturday evening.And wouldn't it be convenient for a baggage thief if they had their address in the bag along with the keys?
The family were asked to pack keys and mobile phones in suitcases. [...]
"Having spent several hours trying to claim our bags [at Heathrow], we abandoned the car at the airport because the keys were in the luggage as requested.
"We queued for ages for a taxi - which cost £60 - and travelled home obviously with a distressed baby and had to smash a window to get into our house in the dark on Saturday evening because both sets of keys were in the baggage as requested."
Source: the BBC
from a blog discussion:
The ban on carry-on luggage in the UK caused massive delays across the board. Checked-in luggage is subject to many more security checks than the simple xray that carry-on luggage gets, so flights were greatly delayed as a result.Other reports bear this out. One US article suggests a novel solution:-o-
In fact, most of the low-cost airlines were trying to get rid of checked in luggage completely by offering incentives - such as charging for checked-in luggage and Internet/FastPass check-ins for people with hand baggage only. These don't work so well when people still have to queue to check in their luggage.
I carried my main bag on the plane and checked the make-up, toothpaste, etc., and a few other non-essentials in a small, cushioned laptop case. This didn't prevent me from having to wait at baggage claim to retrieve that bag, but at least I didn't risk losing anything important.The article also notes that yes, "[r]eports of lost, damaged, delayed and pilfered checked luggage filed with the Department of Transportation have been rising".