Ray Nayyar flew on Sun Country Airlines back to Las Vegas after competing in the U.S. Open Racquetball tournament in Minneapolis, but three of his racquets were lost along the way.
Todd Pernsteiner was flying Sun Country to Palm Springs on Christmas Eve when a conveyor at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport quit working and his bag got lost. For both men, as with hundreds of other travelers over the past year, it took Sun Country days to explain what was going on.
Lost luggage is a risk when flying and happens on all airlines. But Sun Country has a customer service issue — and it knows it. "We want the customer to know we recognize this," Brian Davis, chief marketing officer for the Eagan-based airline, said in an interview.
Sun Country made many changes in 2018 — expanding its route network, reshaping its ticket and fee structure and outsourcing ground crew jobs at MSP — that eroded its ability to find lost luggage and communicate with passengers. For months, complaints grew even though data showed it was not losing or mistakenly routing luggage more than it usually did.
"We aren't losing any more bags, but we are clearly causing more frustrations," Davis said.
Nayyar called his dealings with Sun Country over his racquets a "nonstop merry-go-round" with everyone he spoke to "passing the buck." Pernsteiner said that when he finally got his bag back, he learned it had been stolen and left in the parking lot of a Bloomington hotel.
In January, Sun Country executives assembled a team of workers across departments to investigate why complaints were rising and to redesign processes to fix problems.
The airline at the time was in the midst of a streak, which began in August and lasted into February, in which it didn't cancel a single flight. Even so, it was tracking a jump in complaints from customers about delayed flights. Meanwhile, both the airline and officials at MSP were noticing longer-than-usual lines at Sun Country's check-in area in Terminal 2.