Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

United Airlines delays flight for man to see dying mother

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

TMMT

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 25, 2002
Posts
21,656
(CNN) -- If Kerry Drake missed his connecting flight, he wouldn't get to the hospital in time to say goodbye to his mother.
Drake got the news on the morning of January 24 that his mother, who had been ill for years from rheumatoid arthritis and had been especially sick the last four months, was dying.

To get to his mother in Lubbock, Texas, the San Francisco resident booked a United Airlines flight, with only 40 minutes between connecting flights in Houston. When his first flight was delayed, Drake thought he would miss his connecting flight to Lubbock, the last one of the day.

Sometimes, airlines go the extra mile

He started crying, obviously distraught. The flight attendants brought napkins for his tears, said they would do what they could to help, and most importantly, got his connecting flight information to the captain, he told CNN.

When he got off the airport train and was running toward the gate, "I was still like maybe 20 yards away when I heard the gate agent say, 'Mr. Drake, we've been expecting you,'" he said.

The captain had radioed ahead

With the information from the flight attendants, the captain had radioed ahead about Drake's situation, and the Lubbock crew had delayed departure to get him on board.

Until that point, Drake had been rushing on adrenaline to make the flight. Finally sitting on that second airplane, he realized how much had gone into helping him get on that plane. "I was overcome with emotion," he said.

Even his luggage arrived on time. The Houston ground crew made sure of it.

He made it to the hospital in time to see his mother. "At one point she opened her eyes, and I think she recognized me," said Drake, who spent the night at the hospital. "Around 4 a.m. she had a real moment of coherence, a last rally, although we didn't know it at the time. It was the last time."

She died that morning.

Employees working together

Drake wrote to United Airlines upon his return to ensure that the flight attendants, pilots, gate agents and baggage handlers who helped him that day were thanked for their service. His story made it into an employee newsletter as an example of what employees could do. "Our employees really worked together that day to help this customer," said United spokeswoman Megan McCarthy.

"This almost never happens," wrote Christopher Elliott, who first told Drake's story on his airline consumer advocate website, via e-mail. "Airline employees are evaluated based on their ability to keep a schedule. Airlines compete with each other on who has the best on-time departure record."

Pilot holds flight for man going to see dying grandson

"When the crew on this flight heard about this distraught passenger trying to make his connection, they must have said, 'To hell with it,'" wrote Elliott, who's also the reader advocate for National Geographic Traveler. "And they made the right call."

http://www.cnn.com/2013/03/06/travel/united-flight-delay-dying-mother/index.html?hpt=hp_c1
 
Great job UAL! It's amazing every pax we fly has their own story and reason to get there. I'm glad they helped and had compassion.
 
Piedmont Airlines/US Airways did this also. I was pulled off my original crew and sent to do a flight to HTS. Not knowing the reason yet I walk over to my new gate. My new FO/FA were already on the plane. Then this woman approached me crying and saying thank you for coming over and doing this flight.
Scheduling hadn't told me anything except I had changes to my crew. I thought a Captain had 30/7 issues. But when I walked towards my plane the Gate Agent said they had taking me off my ILM round trip because the ladies daughter (Marshal University Student) had been robbed and shot in the head. They were keeping her on life support until her mother and father got up there to the hospital. Wow.. I have a daughter and the emotions are crazy.
I was thankful that Piedmont/US Airways had done this instead of taking a 2 hour delay.
 
Great job UAL! It's amazing every pax we fly has their own story and reason to get there. I'm glad they helped and had compassion.

UAL had nothing to do with this, it was the individual employees who stepped outside the box. This was people, not some huge inanimate, soulless business.
 
UAL had nothing to do with this, it was the individual employees who stepped outside the box. This was people, not some huge inanimate, soulless business.

There it is. The employees would no doubt have been disciplined for their failure to adhere to company policy had this not been picked up by the media. Good for them for putting humanity above on time performance. The down side? Now every time John Q. Public is running late, he's going to claim he's going to see his dying mommy. As a group, society is pretty shameless.
 
Helping another being who is obviously distressed is a human trait. Corporations exhibit these traits only through human intervention/actions. It is a testament to the people employed by UAL that after all the adversity that a corporation can rain down on its employees they did what they did, for a customer in a customer service industry.
 
UAL had nothing to do with this, it was the individual employees who stepped outside the box. This was people, not some huge inanimate, soulless business.

And those people were probably hassled about the departure delay out of Houston by their CP.
 

Latest resources

Back
Top