As summer festival season approaches, musicians share their air-travel horror stories.
In 2014, Christopher Wilke, a lute player and University of Cincinnati music professor, had his $10,000 instrument destroyed on a Delta flight. Wilke was fastidious with his instrument, even placing a humidifier inside the case to prevent drying. Delta paid for repairs, but he put the blame for these incidents squarely on careless policies from both TSA and the airline.
“Discovering the power of customs is a scary thing. If they want to, they can just hold you there,” she said. A document called a carnet — essentially a global passport for baggage — can help smooth the process, and keeping a detailed manifest of all your gear and extra zip-ties can help inspections move more quickly while keeping cases secure.
But musicians aren’t totally powerless. While the TSA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are government agencies that, in the Trump era, are often feared as xenophobic, airlines sometimes respond to commercial pressure.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Coronavirus is threatening to end the world air-travel boomThe coronavirus will be a test for US airlines that have posted 10 consecutive years of profits.
Read more »
European stocks slide again as pandemic fears mountEuropean stocks tumble as a jump in coronavirus cases outside of China deepened fears of a looming pandemic
Read more »
Black Hair Defined: Readers Share Their Videos, Photos, And StoriesThank you for sharing your amazing stories with us.
Read more »