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Air Sickness
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Ready for vengeance, everyone?
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It is I, the Great Shopping Avenger, reporting to
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you from the Great Hall of Consumer Justice, a k a the Shopping Avenger's
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poorly air-conditioned attic office.
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The Shopping Avenger has had a terribly busy month
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(Aquaman never had it so busy), and he is pleased to report that demand for his
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services has grown exponentially. He is also disconcerted, because the sheer
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number of e-mails in response to last month's installment means that too many
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evil corporations are treating too many loyal consumers without regard for the
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basic norms of customer care, such as answering the phone and not calling
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customers bad names.
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Before we turn to this month's shameful examples of
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corporate malfeasance, a couple of housekeeping notes:
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1) Two dozen readers wrote to let the Shopping
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Avenger know they were pissed off by his use of the term "pissed off" in last
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month's column. The term "is offensive to anyone with any sense of courtesy,
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pride in themselves, décor of personality, and sense of decency," the vengeful
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reader R. wrote.
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The Shopping Avenger notes that he possesses a
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great deal of "décor of personality." He also notes that many readers, driven
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to near madness by customer-service representatives, use strong language to
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describe their plights, and the Shopping Avenger is merely reflecting their
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anger. Though the Shopping Avenger offers this piece of advice: When writing to
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"consumer care specialists," or whatever they're being called today, do not use
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the honorific "asshole" by way of greeting. And remember: The assholes are the
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ones making seven-figure salaries. The people at the other end of the 800 line
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are lackeys and shills and running dogs, but they aren't assholes.
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2) Speaking of lackeys,
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it has now been approximately 47 days since U-Haul spokeswoman Johna Burke
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promised to share her company's reservation policy with the Shopping Avenger.
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For those of you who missed the , the Shopping Avenger attempted to help an
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aggrieved U-Haul customer who made a reservation for a truck, only to be told
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close to the time of pick-up that no such reservation existed.
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Though U-Haul--apparently unimpressed by the supernatural
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power of the Shopping Avenger--has not deigned to provide answers, no fewer
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than 34 deputy Avengers e-mailed over the past month, complaining about
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U-Haul's reservation policy. "I reserved a U-Haul truck for a Saturday morning
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to be picked up at 8," one correspondent, T., reports. "I hired some help for
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the day to help me move. When I arrived that morning to pick it up, I was told
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it was not there yet. After much complaining, a few phone calls were made, and
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I was told the truck was 200 miles away."
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T.'s complaint is entirely typical. Another member
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of the Avenging Brigade, B., wrote in to say this: "A U-Haul employee in
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Phoenix last 4 th of July weekend told me the company had 2,000
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reservations in Phoenix that weekend and 600 available trucks. My truck was
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three days late, and I only got it by threatening legal action."
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The Shopping Avenger will
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revisit the U-Haul issue each month until satisfactory explanations are
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provided. That is the least the Shopping Avenger can do for you, the pissed-off
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consumer.
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Last month, the Shopping Avenger also put out a call for
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airline and pest-control horror stories. One wag, J., wrote in to ask, "Is
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there a difference between pests and airlines?" (Contest alert: Best punch line
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e-mailed to the Shopping Avenger
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will be rewarded by public mention in this space, plus a lifetime supply of
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Turtle Wax, if the Shopping Avenger can figure out what Turtle Wax is.)
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The complaints poured in. As noted previously, the
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Shopping Avenger is but one superhero, and he issues abject apologies to all
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those who did not receive personal responses.
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Pest control will be dealt with in a future
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episode. But about those airlines: The interesting thing about the airline
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complainants is that they don't even want the Shopping Avenger to seek
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retribution or restitution. All they want to do is vent. Maybe no one believes
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that airlines even care anymore or are capable of responding to complaints.
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The complaints covered
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the waterfront: baggage problems, surly flight attendants, mysteriously
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canceled flights, billing atrocities. But the most compelling complaints
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concerned bereavement fares. There's nothing like an airline screwing with
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someone who's going to bury his mother to make the blood boil.
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"Recently, my mother passed away and I needed to travel
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from Orlando to Fort Wayne, Indiana, the next day in order to attend her
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funeral," our correspondent J.D. writes. "In June of last year, I had traveled
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to Orlando from Detroit on Northwest Airlines (that should send up a few red
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flags), and was given a $400 travel voucher because the plane literally did not
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show up. Being that airline tickets, even a bereavement fare, purchased at the
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last minute can be quite expensive, I opted to cash in my voucher."
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J.D. says he made the reservation by telephone,
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holding the seat with his credit card. He was told to present his credit card
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with the voucher upon his arrival at the airport, where he would be charged,
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obviously, only for the part of the ticket not covered by the $400 voucher.
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Then, trouble. "On arriving at the airport I
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proceeded to do this and was told by the agent that the tickets were already
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purchased and I could not use my voucher," J.D. writes. "I contested this, but
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she was unwilling to budge and unwilling to get a supervisor, telling me that,
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'That's just the way it is.' "
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J.D. says he let it drop, vowing to "settle this
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upon my return from the funeral."
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After the funeral, he contacted Northwest, he says,
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and after much frustrating dialing, reached an answering machine. "I had to
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leave my particulars on a voice mail because no agents were available to take
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my call. This worked out poorly, since when the agent called me back, she got
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my voice mail and left a message with the same number. So when I called back,
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of course all I got was the same opportunity to leave my particulars on their
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voice mail system."
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This is when the customer says, "Arrrghh."
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After much go-around,
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J.D. called American Express, told them his plight, and Amex canceled the
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entire charge.
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I e-mailed Northwest spokeswoman Marta Laughlin, who
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responded first by questioning J.D.'s motivation: "The writer's remarks about
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the 'plane never showing up' and 'raising red flags' cause me to question his
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story. It just sounds like there's something more personal here."
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One could argue that a passenger might have
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"personal" feelings about an airline after said airline messed with his head
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while he was traveling to his mother's funeral.
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Laughlin followed up, though, by saying that "the
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death of anyone close is a very emotional and trying experience, and
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individuals frequently behave differently as a result of their pain." She's
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still blaming the customer but, she continues, the "Northwest employee at the
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airport should have taken extra steps to help the writer in his time of need. I
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wish that was the case, and I apologize on behalf of Northwest Airlines."
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Grudging, double-edged,
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but an apology all the same.
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We will return to the issue of airlines in a future
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episode, but the Shopping Avenger would like to relate another tale that caught
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his attention this past month. The company in question is Sprint PCS, and the
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story most definitively does not end with an apology.
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In short strokes, the story goes like this: A
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customer, William Summerhill, an associate professor of history at UCLA,
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ordered two phones from Sprint PCS. He was billed for six--weirdly, at three
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different prices (still another charge, for one cent, was also billed to his
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credit card by Sprint PCS). He fought the bill; Sprint PCS fought back, by
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phone and fax, wasting a good amount of time.
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Finally, his credit card
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company agreed that he was the victim of false billing and canceled out the
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charges for four of the six phones. Professor Summerhill continued to be
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billed, but one thing he did not receive in the mail was a rebate on one of the
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two remaining phones, part of a special promotion he signed up for. Though he
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paid for the two phones, he withheld paying his monthly fee until Sprint PCS
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straightened out his case and gave him his rebate. In response, Sprint PCS
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canceled his service and referred his case to a collection agency, which is
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threatening his credit rating.
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When I first contacted Sprint PCS (which is a tale in
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itself--the 800-line operator, citing policy, refused to disclose the telephone
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number of Sprint PCS headquarters, apparently fearing that customers might try
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to talk to the executives whose salaries they pay), a spokesman, Tom Murphy,
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told me the case was terribly complex. Actually, it isn't: Sprint PCS billed a
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customer for six phones, refused to stop billing him, and threatened him when
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he wouldn't pay for service pending a resolution of the problem.
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Summerhill, who is now a happy customer of
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AT&T, says he will pay the monthly fees when he receives an apology and the
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rebate money. The rebate money is owed to him, and so is the apology. He
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estimates that he has spent 40 to 50 hours trying to straighten out the billing
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problem, which is clearly Sprint PCS's problem.
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But no apology is
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forthcoming. The Shopping Avenger received an e-mail from Alison Hill, an
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"executive analyst" at Sprint PCS, who writes that she works "directly for Mr.
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Andrew Sukawaty, the President and CEO of Sprint PCS." Hill concedes that
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Sprint PCS was at fault for erroneously charging Summerhill for phones he did
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not want--she claims he was charged for two phones he didn't want, even though
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his records show he was billed for four--but she says the "customer is also at
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fault" for not paying his bill for telephone calls made on the phones he did
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use.
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I spoke with Hill directly and told her it seemed
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reasonable to me that Summerhill would withhold payment until his billing
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dispute was settled and the rebate issue resolved. She said he was wrong. I
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mentioned to her the quaint notion that "the customer is always right," and she
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said, "in my opinion, the customer is wrong."
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Obviously, the Shopping Avenger juju has not yet
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worked on Sprint PCS, but Summerhill reports that it has worked on the
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collection agency. "I told the agency that I was reporting this matter to the
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FCC, to the California consumer protection people, and to the Shopping Avenger
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at
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Slate
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. She didn't say anything about the FCC or the consumer
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protection people, but she did ask me to please not give the name of the
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collection agency to
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Slate
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."
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Professor Summerhill has
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promised to tell everyone at UCLA and in his Army Reserve unit to boycott
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Sprint PCS. "I'm pro-business, I love America, I love capitalism, but these
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people are crazy," he said. "They could make this go away, but they won't."
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Sprint PCS could take a cue from Southwest Airlines, one of
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a handful of companies in America with sterling reputations for customer
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service. A little while back, the Shopping Avenger received a plaintive e-mail
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from B., who reported that he was the only passenger on his flight not to
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receive free drink coupons. Apparently, the flight was late, and as a friendly
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gesture Southwest let the passengers get drunk on its dime. But not B. Somehow,
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he was skipped over.
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The Shopping Avenger let Ed Stewart, Southwest's
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spokesman, know of B.'s sad story, and within hours, the Shopping Avenger
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received this reply: "As I'm sure you've heard, we here at Southwest Airlines
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pride ourselves on our Customer Service and would NEVER want it to be said that
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we deprived anyone--particularly a Customer!--the opportunity to have a drink
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on us."
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Stewart says that B. will be mailed an apology,
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plus Southwest peanuts, plus a coupon book for free drinks--including mixed
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drinks!
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"I hope that this will satisfy your sense of
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justice," he wrote.
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It does indeed.
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Got a consumer
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score you want settled? Send e-mail to [email protected].
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