Family’s dream trip to Disney turns into a nightmare, thanks to airline error

Via DisDining.com

Where you call home can have a strong bearing on how easily you get to the Walt Disney World Resort for a family vacation, as one family discovered during their recent Disney trip, during which the journey itself proved nearly impossible.

The Miller family was looking forward to their trip to the Most Magical Place on Earth. Surely they’d done their due diligence in planning, choosing a Disney Resort Hotel at which to stay, making sure they had their park pass reservations squared away, and deciding which restaurants to try during their visit to the parks.

They had been very careful when booking airfare from the United Kingdom to Orlando International Airport, ensuring that each of the four of them had a seat on the airliner on the departing and return flights. But for all of their planning and preparation, the Millers were still met with obstacles and hardships along the way.

What was to be a magical family vacation to the Walt Disney World Resort turned into a getaway chock full of setbacks, disappointments, and a large sum of extra, unforeseen, and unplanned for out-of-pocket expenses, all because of a booking error by the airline.

According to The Sun, the Millers arrived at Birmingham Airport on May 30 to board a plane bound for Orlando. They had originally planned to travel in early April, but after Sheldon Miller’s father became ill, the family postponed the trip until the end of May.

But when they went to check in for their scheduled flight with KLM Airlines, they were informed that they had been booked on a return flight, instead of on a flight bound for the United States because of a booking error.

family of four

Desperate not to disappoint his children, a 7-year-old daughter and 13-year-old son, Sheldon had no choice–per the airline–but to fork out an additional £2,600, or approximately $3,150 USD, for tickets to board an outbound flight to Orlando with a different airline, Aer Lingus. And that was in addition to the cost of an overnight hotel stay, as the family was stranded, and the new flight was scheduled for the next day.

Sheldon Miller called the situation “an utterly ridiculous saga,” stating in an interview:

“After queueing for an hour, we got to the check-in desk, and they told us we weren’t booked in to fly out, but we were booked in to fly back, and there was no way we would be able to board. At that point, our seven-year-old daughter burst into tears, and our 13-year-old son wasn’t best pleased either. Neither were we.”

Miller said the family was stuck, spending three hours in an attempt to speak to someone with KLM Airlines, only to be told by a representative at the airline’s call center that they would need to file a complaint via the airline’s social media, as the call center was unable to help in any way.

“I’ve never heard anything so ridiculous in all my life,” he said.

The family had received an email confirmation about the change to their tickets–from early April to late May–along with a check-in link with the airline. But despite the confirmation, the Miller family was denied boarding, as the airline said none of the family members were registered to fly on the very outbound flight for which they had confirmation.

klm airlines confirmation

Sheldon said he didn’t receive help from anyone, and he was forced to purchase new tickets for a departing flight to Orlando.

The issues with KLM Airlines caused a delay for the family in getting to Disney World, though they did finally make it to Orlando. But when their magical Disney vacation came to an end, they were met with yet another obstacle in returning home to the U. K.

As if a prank were being played on the family, the Millers were once again denied boarding on their return flight, and once again, they received no assistance from the airline in correcting the error. Instead, they were forced to make their way home very slowly–with multiple stops along the way–via Virgin Atlantic Airlines.

They zigzagged across the globe, departing Orlando International Airport bound for London Heathrow. From there, the family traveled to Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and from Amsterdam, finally to their home in Birmingham.

At the time of publication, the Miller family is still waiting for the airline to compensate them for the extra departing and returning flights they were forced to purchase, even though they had already paid for both previously and had the airline’s confirmation to prove it. Sheldon says no one took responsibility for the fiasco.

“No one has stepped up in any way,” he said. “The whole experience felt like one massive ‘pass the parcel,’ with no one at KLM remotely interested in our customer issue, let alone willing to take responsibility for it.”

“We still not have had any communication from KLM about the refund of our Aer Lingus flight and airport hotel stay,” he continued. “You cannot charge people return full fare and only deliver one half of a journey and continually keep customers in the dark, passing them from pillar to post and expect them to put up and shut up.”

In a statement to The Sun, a representative for KLM Airlines said: “We are aware of the incident and are currently conducting an investigation into what happened.”

Here’s hoping that the family’s time at Disney World in between the airline ordeals was very magical indeed.