Send Help: Baggage Mountain Looms at Heathrow

by Jordan Yerman | March 30, 2008 at 06:41 am
253 views | 0 Recommendations | 1 comment

British Airways is calling in reinforcements to conquer Mount Luggage, as the infrastructural and organizational meltdowns at Heathrow's Terminal 5 leave all involved with egg on their face.

With nearly 250 flights cancelled since Thursday's opening of the $8,6-billion Terminal Five (T5) and more cancellations due in coming days, the airline could not say when matters would return to normal.

"We have got 400 extra staff in today volunteering to get the bags moved. There are still around 15 000 bags to move," a spokesperson said. "We are working around the clock to get them back to their owners."

The launch of the terminal has proved a public relations disaster with potential major financial pain for BA, which had hoped the new building would answer criticism prompted by overcrowding at the world's busiest international airport.

It has forced the postponement of an advertising campaign promoting the new terminal due to have been launched next week.

The problems have also triggered a fresh bout of soul-searching among Britons about their failure to deliver large infrastructure projects.

Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly said on Sunday she had held talks with the airline and airport operator BAA, owned by Spain's Ferrovial, and was prepared to step in with unspecified help if it became necessary.

BA said it expected to operate the terminal at 87% capacity on Monday and Tuesday, a slight improvement from the 85% -- equivalent to 37 cancellations -- it said it was operating on Sunday.

"We have not been given information beyond Tuesday," the spokesperson said.

But she added that everything depended on the operation of the terminal's bar-coded baggage handling system. The breakdown of the system on Thursday and a series of other operational hitches triggered the chaos.

I'm not sure about "soul searching"; most Brits probably just wanted their luggage back, and are not necessarily linking this with things like the Jubilee Line extension in London, which required foreign contractors to sort the project out, or the string of sensitive data losses from various sectors. Previous Coverage:
BA suspends ad campaign
New Heathrow terminal day two: 34 more flights cancelled
Heathrow Terminal 5 already experiencing chaos - check-in suspended

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gerrypopplestone

I love these stories that rubbish bloody so called British Airways!  And the soul searching should be going on in management circles, although, to be fair, the management techniques used to build T5 were much more advanced than previously.

Gerrypops

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