Don’t let your airline rights fly away. Here’s how to protect them
You can almost feel it when you fly these days. It’s that sense that you’re a second-class citizen with limited rights — or none at all.
You can almost feel it when you fly these days. It’s that sense that you’re a second-class citizen with limited rights — or none at all.
An airport can be a dangerous place.
Just ask Brandon Barron, who recently flew from Charlotte to Orlando with his wife, four young kids and his mother, who has Alzheimer’s.
On a recent flight from San Francisco to New York, Luca Dal Zotto found himself sitting next to a noisy airline passenger.
Everything seemed fine when Josie Daigle rented a car in Boston from a national chain. A cursory glance at the vehicle before she drove off with her two young kids suggested the car was safe.
Should your hotel room include air conditioning? Victoria Holtz thinks so. Her resort in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., did not.
Do I really need to show you pictures of Dubrovnik when there’s a cruise ship in town, or of the Trevi Fountain in Rome on a hot day, to prove travel has never been as crowded as it is this summer?
Ever had this nightmare? You’re racing through the airport, dodging slow-moving travelers, swerving to avoid those annoying golf carts, only to arrive breathlessly at your gate just as the doors close.
If you feel like you’re spending more time standing in line than on vacation, then you’ve probably been traveling this year.
Chloe Bennet says she felt unwelcome when she visited Venice recently. And she had a decision to make.
Is the public Wi-Fi network at JFK International Airport safe? That’s what one of Vivian Au’s customers wanted to know recently.