BBC: LHR T5 Int Arrivals "unchecked" — Civil Aviation Forum | Airliners.net
624 users checked-in.You are not checked-in. No username? Join us!



Sponsor Message:
Civil Aviation Forum
My Starred Topics | Profile | New Topic | Forum Index | Help | Search 
BBC: LHR T5 Int Arrivals "unchecked"  
User currently offlineJamesontheroad From United Kingdom, joined Jul 2005, 226 posts, RR: 0
Posted (6 days 4 hours 36 minutes ago) and read 4004 times:

I apologise to everyone bored of hearing about T5, but my jaw continues to drop at the revelations about T5...

Quote:
T5 foreign passengers 'unchecked'
Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7394621.stm
Updated at 11:42 GMT, Sunday, 11 May 2008 12:42 UK

Security errors at Heathrow's T5 have allowed foreign passengers to enter the UK without showing their passports.

British Airways (BA) blamed confusion over the terminal's layout for overseas passengers being treated as domestic arrivals and bypassing immigration.

...

It is understood the security breaches happened when shuttle bus drivers collected passengers from overseas flights and dropped them at a gate intended for domestic arrivals.

...continues


 banghead 

41 replies: All unread, showing first 25:
 
User currently offlineBabybus From United Kingdom, joined Dec 2003, 1143 posts, RR: 2
Reply 1, posted (6 days 3 hours 41 minutes ago) and read 3865 times:

Doesn't surprise me.  Yeah sure

I remember when I got off my plane a few weeks ago at T5 I couldn't make out where to go next. Proving how difficult it is to navigate, they had people acting as guides all over the place.

User currently offlinePlymSpotter From Spain, joined Jun 2004, 6391 posts, RR: 49
Reply 2, posted (6 days 2 hours 33 minutes ago) and read 3743 times:
AIRLINERS.NET CREW
CUSTOMER SERVICE & SUPPORT

Mistakes happen, similarly I was in a coach with LHR-BCN passengers onboard from an IB flight which stopped off at a domestic arrivals point. Nobody noticed, and they didn't even have the excuse of being unfamiliar with the new terminal building.


Dan  Smile


If I Get G-WOWD again I'll Scream....!!!!

User currently offlineRutankrd From United Kingdom, joined Sep 2003, 130 posts, RR: 0
Reply 3, posted (6 days 2 hours 24 minutes ago) and read 3718 times:
Support Airliners.net - become a First Class Member!

This is what comes of merging domestic and international !
Years of separation just about everywhere in Europe WORKS !

Those few ! shuttle services should be returned to the ideal T1 facility straightway AND NO NEED FOR THOSE FINGER PRINT (BIO SPYING) techniques to be employed on people traveling legitimately within the SAME country.

User currently offlineTheginge From United Kingdom, joined Oct 2006, 552 posts, RR: 0
Reply 4, posted (6 days 2 hours 18 minutes ago) and read 3704 times:

A BAA problem this time at least!!!

User currently offlineMDS From United Kingdom, joined May 2008, 2 posts, RR: 0
Reply 5, posted (6 days 2 hours 8 minutes ago) and read 3674 times:
Support Airliners.net - become a First Class Member!

It's ridiculous.
They really need to get their act together with Terminal 5.
Regardless of how complicated it is, there's no excuse for such incompetence.

(Also, my first post!)

User currently offlineManchesterMAN From United Kingdom, joined Sep 2003, 970 posts, RR: 0
Reply 6, posted (6 days 1 hour 58 minutes ago) and read 3638 times:



Quoting Rutankrd (Reply 3):
This is what comes of merging domestic and international !
Years of separation just about everywhere in Europe WORKS !

This story has nothing to do with segregation of domestic and int'l pax. This could have happened at any airport. The bus drivers dropped the pax at the wrong arrival point. Could have happened at T1 as well.


Flown on: AB6,319,320,321,332,333,342,343,346,717,727,732,733,734,735,73G,738,739,744,752,753,762,763,764,772,773,77W,DC

User currently offlineUnited1 From United States, joined Oct 2003, 791 posts, RR: 1
Reply 7, posted (6 days 1 hour 58 minutes ago) and read 3638 times:



Quoting Rutankrd (Reply 3):
Those few ! shuttle services should be returned to the ideal T1 facility straightway AND NO NEED FOR THOSE FINGER PRINT (BIO SPYING) techniques to be employed on people traveling legitimately within the SAME country.

I've kind of been surprised that BA didn't consolidated all of its domestic operations at LGW and use LHR exclusively for longhaul and most European flights after Open skies took effect. I know that would be a pain for UK citizens living outside of London having to transfer between LGW/LHR to connect but it would solve this problem and make it quite a bit easier for BAs passengers who are just making a connection in LHR.


Semper Fi

User currently offlineTonyBurr From United States, joined Mar 2001, 928 posts, RR: 0
Reply 8, posted (5 days 22 hours 55 minutes ago) and read 3407 times:

United1 says:
"I've kind of been surprised that BA didn't consolidated all of its domestic operations at LGW and use LHR exclusively for longhaul and most European flights after Open skies took effect. I know that would be a pain for UK citizens living outside of London having to transfer between LGW/LHR to connect but it would solve this problem and make it quite a bit easier for BAs passengers who are just making a connection in LHR.


United1, do you fly through London often? Do you fly through international cities, using them as a transfer point often? To say that LHR should be used for long haul and LGW for domestic is quite a statement. LHR is not just an O&D for London. People transfer it for onward flights throughout the world and the UK. How would you see a BA passenger arriving at LHR from NRT transferring to LGW for a flight on BA to MAN at say 7:00 AM. How long would you estimate the time needed to be?
Isn't the problem found in Japanese airports except NGO? How many hour between Tokyo's international airport and domestic airport at say 4:00 PM?

From your travel experience, how would you see the transfers accomplished in your divided London airports with heavy luggage and four children in tow ?

User currently offlineTCXDegsy From United Kingdom, joined Jan 2006, 322 posts, RR: 2
Reply 9, posted (5 days 22 hours 50 minutes ago) and read 3376 times:



Quoting United1 (Reply 7):
I know that would be a pain for UK citizens living outside of London having to transfer between LGW/LHR to connect but it would solve this problem and make it quite a bit easier for BAs passengers who are just making a connection in LHR.

A bit of a pain? Understatement of the year, methinks!

User currently offlineOA260 From Ireland, joined Nov 2006, 7966 posts, RR: 13
Reply 10, posted (5 days 22 hours 50 minutes ago) and read 3376 times:



Quoting United1 (Reply 7):
I've kind of been surprised that BA didn't consolidated all of its domestic operations at LGW and use LHR exclusively for longhaul and most European flights after Open skies took effect. I know that would be a pain for UK citizens living outside of London having to transfer between LGW/LHR to connect but it would solve this problem and make it quite a bit easier for BAs passengers who are just making a connection in LHR.

That has to be the craziest thing I have ever heard !! Its like saying lets make OAK for Domestics and SFO for international flights .

As for the mess up at T5 , I guess there are some very happy people now living visa free in the UK ...LOL...


NO ANGELS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35hSMHaUw8E

User currently offlineUnited1 From United States, joined Oct 2003, 791 posts, RR: 1
Reply 11, posted (5 days 22 hours 28 minutes ago) and read 3307 times:



Quoting TonyBurr (Reply 8):
United1, do you fly through London often? Do you fly through international cities, using them as a transfer point often? To say that LHR should be used for long haul and LGW for domestic is quite a statement. LHR is not just an O&D for London. People transfer it for onward flights throughout the world and the UK. How would you see a BA passenger arriving at LHR from NRT transferring to LGW for a flight on BA to MAN at say 7:00 AM. How long would you estimate the time needed to be?
Isn't the problem found in Japanese airports except NGO? How many hour between Tokyo's international airport and domestic airport at say 4:00 PM?

I logged about 120K across the Pacific last year (a chunk of it through the much maligned NW hub at NRT.) The year before that most of that was across the Atlantic. As I said it would be a bother for people not transiting international to international or terminating in London. However to your point of someone arriving from NRT and connecting to MAN and having to transit to LGW in order to make the connection, BA operates very frequent flights between LHR/LGW and MAN so there isn't much of a worry about missing a flights. There are already quite a few passengers that have to transfer between LHR/LGW in order to make international connections on BA everyday so its not like theres no precedence for making passengers transit between the airports.

As an example LAX-WAW via London on BA requires a transfer between LHR and LGW.

Quoting OA260 (Reply 10):
That has to be the craziest thing I have ever heard !! Its like saying lets make OAK for Domestics and SFO for international flights .

Its hard to compare SFO/OAK to LGW/LHR as SFO/OAK do not have a single carrier with split hub operations between them, also SFO/OAK are not slot constrained so unlike LGW/LHR there is no reason to have a carrier split its hub. Also why is it crazy to suggest that BA move its domestic operations to LGW and have LHR as its international hub? If anything it would reduce the amount of people having to be processed through customs as there would be no more reason to have passengers making international to international connections clear customs just to transfer between LGW/LHR.


Semper Fi

User currently offlineOA260 From Ireland, joined Nov 2006, 7966 posts, RR: 13
Reply 12, posted (5 days 22 hours 23 minutes ago) and read 3286 times:



Quoting United1 (Reply 11):
Also why is it crazy to suggest that BA move its domestic operations to LGW and have LHR as its international hub?

Do you know how many British people still depend on LHR for connections to BA's worldwide network? Alot of Domestic flights to LHR feed BA's WW network.


NO ANGELS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35hSMHaUw8E

User currently offlineConcentriq From United States, joined Jan 2005, 355 posts, RR: 0
Reply 13, posted (5 days 22 hours 20 minutes ago) and read 3286 times:

Arriving to CDG in 2006 from ORD: apparently french border services were short of staff. we waited for 1 hr in some corridor, after which we were all marched through the border crossing without showing our passports. All they said, that if you need transit visa, wait here for passport stamp. Since Paris was my final destination, i didnt stick around to get a stamp.


Mobilis In Mobili

User currently offlineUnited1 From United States, joined Oct 2003, 791 posts, RR: 1
Reply 14, posted (5 days 21 hours 53 minutes ago) and read 3214 times:

Quoting OA260 (Reply 12):
Quoting United1 (Reply 11):
Also why is it crazy to suggest that BA move its domestic operations to LGW and have LHR as its international hub?

Do you know how many British people still depend on LHR for connections to BA's worldwide network? Alot of Domestic flights to LHR feed BA's WW network.

About 11% of LHRs traffic is domestic, I have no idea how many passengers are in transit or are terminating in London. So the entire point behind this thread was to discuss how to prevent people from bypassing customs accidentally.

The way I see it BA and BAA have several choices all of which have pluses and minuses.

1. Continue on as before and hope that this never happens again (not realistic as mistakes will happen from time to time.)
2. Shift domestic operations to another part of LHR (that will increase BAs LHR operating cost as they now need to operate in two or three terminals again Domestic, 757s out of T3 as long those operations continue, and T5. Not to mention continuing to annoying the rest of LHRs airlines as they will have to reshuffle their own flights again.)
3. Move Domestic to LGW and consolidate international operations at LHR (causes domestic passengers to have to transit but at the same time lowers the amount of workload for Customs by ending the practice of having international to international passengers transit.)
4 Structurally modify T5 so segregate Domestic form International passengers (probably the most costly option however may be the most foolproof one as well)
5. Require all passengers Domestic and International to see a customs agent before leaving the airport. (Would add greatly to customs workload and annoy the heck out of domestic passengers transiting and ending their journeys at LHR.)

[Edited 2008-05-11 15:26:10]


Semper Fi

User currently offlineIkramerica From United States, joined May 2005, 13560 posts, RR: 32
Reply 15, posted (5 days 21 hours 7 minutes ago) and read 3132 times:



Quoting Rutankrd (Reply 3):
This is what comes of merging domestic and international !
Years of separation just about everywhere in Europe WORKS !

Either do it the sterile way (segregated), or do it the non-sterile way (everyone clears immigration), but the third way is asking for trouble. Of course the trouble comes from people making mistakes, but the solution has always been to make it less complicated so mistakes are harder to make.

One way to possibly mitigate this problem is to create "domestic buses" and "international buses" with two different markings and colors (orange for one, blue for the other, etc.), and the bus drivers also are assigned to one route or the other all the time (no switching by day, no two assignments on the same day). That way, on the off chance international bus still pulls up to the wrong plane or unloading point, EVERYONE working there would know the error. "hey, what's the orange bus doing here?"


Of all the things to worry about... the Wookie has no pants.

User currently offlinePanAm747 From United States, joined Feb 2004, 3492 posts, RR: 4
Reply 16, posted (5 days 19 hours 37 minutes ago) and read 3027 times:
Support Airliners.net - become a First Class Member!

I realize the demand for gates and slots at LHR is tight, but wouldn't it be simpler to make one terminal for "UK-only" domestic flights, and the rest to be divided up between international carriers?

Let's say T1 is domestic only, and the others become international. In order to access the other terminals secure areas, one must show their passport/onward ticket. Arriving passengers at the other terminals have no access to any other terminals until they've gone through customs.

Practical considerations aside, I would assume Britain's main focus is security. And while I understand that many airlines are firmly entrenched in their terminals, it strikes me as being VERY insecure having this "haphazard" system of mixing international and domestic flights, with the hope that untested technology will make everything run smoothely.


Pan Am:The World's Most Experienced Airline - P(oor) S(ailor's) A(irline): San Diego's Hometown Airline-Catch Our Smile!

User currently offlineJGPH1A From South Africa, joined Aug 2003, 16054 posts, RR: 80
Reply 17, posted (5 days 14 hours 28 minutes ago) and read 2884 times:
Support Airliners.net - become a First Class Member!



Quoting United1 (Reply 11):
There are already quite a few passengers that have to transfer between LHR/LGW in order to make international connections on BA everyday so its not like theres no precedence for making passengers transit between the airports.

Have you ever actually done the transfer from LHR-LGW or v.v. ? It's a NIGHTMARE ! It's really really bad, and viciously expensive (GBP18.00 for a slow, tedious one-hour bus ride). The queue for the transfer bus at LHR is total chaos - even if you book a ticket before hand there's no guarantee of getting on the bus you want without fighting your way to the front of the line. I hate doing it, and will do anything to avoid it.

Quoting Concentriq (Reply 13):
Arriving to CDG in 2006 from ORD: apparently french border services were short of staff. we waited for 1 hr in some corridor, after which we were all marched through the border crossing without showing our passports. All they said, that if you need transit visa, wait here for passport stamp. Since Paris was my final destination, i didnt stick around to get a stamp.

Same at NCE only they don't make you wait. If you arrive very late at night (BA352 from LHR is a classic example), the immgration desks are not manned - you just walk through. Similarly, the desks are only manned after 7am so if you arrive early enough at the airport, feel free to leave France, nobody cares.

Quoting United1 (Reply 14):
Require all passengers Domestic and International to see a customs agent before leaving the airport. (Would add greatly to customs workload and annoy the heck out of domestic passengers transiting and ending their journeys at LHR.)

All Schengen passengers clear customs at their arrival point, regardless of where their journey started. They just don't need to clear immigration.


I want my sun-drenched, wind-swept Ingrid Bergman kiss, not in the next life, I want it in this...

User currently offlineUnited1 From United States, joined Oct 2003, 791 posts, RR: 1
Reply 18, posted (5 days 13 hours 43 minutes ago) and read 2826 times:



Quoting JGPH1A (Reply 17):
Have you ever actually done the transfer from LHR-LGW or v.v. ? It's a NIGHTMARE ! It's really really bad, and viciously expensive (GBP18.00 for a slow, tedious one-hour bus ride).

Actually I have, while transiting from a UA flight from ORD to a domestic UK flight that was not served via LHR and it sucked. That being said it is an option to move domestic to LGW and consolidate international at LHR I never said it was the best option but it is an idea.

Quoting JGPH1A (Reply 17):
Quoting United1 (Reply 14):
Require all passengers Domestic and International to see a customs agent before leaving the airport. (Would add greatly to customs workload and annoy the heck out of domestic passengers transiting and ending their journeys at LHR.)

All Schengen passengers clear customs at their arrival point, regardless of where their journey started. They just don't need to clear immigration.

I should have been more specific, a typical usage of the word Customs here in the US is as a combined term for Immigration/Customs even though in reality Immigration and Customs are two separate things. That being said I was referring to domestic passengers having to see an immigration agent (even if its just to be waved through with a stub form a domestic flight and an ID) which would of course add to the line that is already present to clear customs and immigration.


Semper Fi