Gatineau woman still waiting for luggage to arrive after 22 days
A Gatineau woman says her carry-on bag has been missing for more than three weeks after she handed it over to an Air Canada flight attendant.
Sharon Lloyd said on her mid-June business trip to Toronto, she gave her bag to a flight attendant in Ottawa because the overhead bins were full. It has now been 22 days since she last saw it.
“I was given a little ticket with my seat number hand written on it to claim my bag at the end,” says Lloyd, who ended up waiting for hours at the airport for her bag, which did not arrive. “I asked where my bag was and I was told there was no record of me having been on the plane and they told me then that they had no record of my luggage either.”
Lloyd's experience comes as airline frustrations continue to plague travellers with long delays, cancelled flights and lost luggage.
She said she was left having to scramble each night of her five-day work trip to shop for clothes, order and pick-up new prescription medicines and call Air Canada for updates.
“This past week I received an email from a Costa Rica baggage claim that they found luggage that they think is mine and then they told me that they would be sending the luggage to Jean Lesage airport in Quebec City,” says Lloyd. “I then answered and said, 'No, that’s six hours away from me. The closest airport is Ottawa.' and I received another email saying it’s been sent on the Jean Lesage flight yesterday morning. I have no flight number, I have no reference number and the tracker that Air Canada uses doesn’t have my bag on record, so I have no idea where my bag is.”
While Lloyd says Air Canada will cover the cost, she doubts it will happen. She said getting through to the claims department has been met with four hour wait times and hang-ups.
“I understand if your systems are broken but you've got to fix them. There has to be some kind of compassion to the people you’re affecting,” she says. “When you try and call and you get a message saying we can’t even put you on hold, it doesn’t reassure people that you actually care about them.”
Last month Air Canada announced that due to ‘customer service shortfalls’, schedules would be reduced for July and August. On average, about 154 flights each day would be cancelled, mostly to and from Toronto and Montreal. Prior to the reduction, Air Canada serviced about 100 flights per day.
John Gradek, coordinator of international aviation with McGill University, says sky-high post-pandemic travel, along with airlines having to hire and train droves of new staff means the months ahead will be turbulent.
“It’s like one big massive snowstorm/thunderstorm that has been going on continuously for six or seven weeks,” says Gradek. “It’s going to take time to train everybody. This is a very dangerous working environment at the airport safety, security … and I think that right now you are seeing a lot of people in the jobs who are not very experienced.
"They've really got to get their sea legs under them in order to become productive and efficient, and that’s going to take a bit of time.”
Gradek expects by mid-September, when summer travel slows and school resumes, airlines will be able to regain control of the situation.
For Lloyd, the past three weeks has given her time to reflect. For her future business travels to Toronto, she's taking the train.
And for future air travel trips, she's going to change the way she packs.
"I'll make sure I spread everyone’s clothes amongst the four luggages that we’re bringing, and I’ll try to bring as much in carry-on as I can.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Salman Rushdie 'on the road to recovery,' agent says
Salman Rushdie is 'on the road to recovery,' his agent confirmed Sunday, two days after the author of 'The Satanic Verses' suffered serious injuries in a stabbing at a lecture in upstate New York.

Arizona parents arrested trying to get in locked-down school
Police arrested three Arizona parents, shocking two of them with stun guns, as they tried to force their way into a school that police locked down Friday after an armed man was seen trying to get on campus, authorities said.
Feds quietly change rules to allow one-time ArriveCAN exemption at land border crossings
The Canada Border Services Agency is temporarily allowing fully vaccinated travellers a one-time exemption to not be penalized if they were unaware of the health documents required through ArriveCAN.
More U.S. lawmakers visiting Taiwan 12 days after Pelosi trip
A delegation of American lawmakers arrived in Taiwan on Sunday, just 12 days after a visit by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that prompted an angry China to launch days of threatening military drills around the self-governing island that Beijing says must come under its control.
FBI seized 'top secret' documents from Trump home
The FBI recovered documents that were labelled 'top secret' from former U.S. President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, according to court papers released Friday after a federal judge unsealed the warrant that authorized the unprecedented search this week.
Two people from Ottawa killed in Port Hope, Ont. plane crash
Two people from Ottawa were killed when their small plane crashed in Port Hope, Ont. this weekend.
LAPD ends investigation into Anne Heche car crash
The Los Angeles Police Department has ended its investigation into Anne Heche's car accident, when the actor crashed into a Los Angeles home on Aug. 5.
More than 10,000 Canadians received a medically-assisted death in 2021: report
More Canadians are ending their lives with a medically-assisted death, says the third federal annual report on medical assistance in dying (MAID). Data shows that 10,064 people died in 2021 with medical aid, an increase of 32 per cent over 2020.
Fire at Coptic church in Cairo kills 41, hurts 14: officials
A fire ripped through a packed church during morning services in Egypt's capital on Sunday, killing at least 41 worshippers and injuring 14.