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The Agony of the Closed Gate?
A member of the forum recently commented on KLM and its policy for transiting passengers, sparking a broader discussion about one of the most stressful experiences in modern air travel. The traveller in question was heading to Dusseldorf (DUS) via Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS) on a single, connecting itinerary. His inbound flight arrived just over 30 minutes behind schedule.After a frantic dash through the vast terminal, he arrived at his connecting gate, only to find the door shut and his name marked as a no show. The bitter sting of the situation was that the aircraft for his DUS flight, the very one he was booked on was still sitting stationary on the stand. The flight had been administratively closed, yet physically it was still present. Thirty odd minutes of inbound delay, and the onwards connection was lost.
This real life experience compels us to ask a critical question for all airlines and passengers:
When the originating delay is the airline’s own fault, and the connecting aircraft is demonstrably at the gate, should the rigid system of cut off times permit an exception, thoughts?