Air Canada returned lost bag, it now had knife,toiletries, ticket scanner inside

41 andy99 35 7/25/2025, 2:22:35 PM cbc.ca ↗

Comments (35)

neom · 1h ago
I can't get over how bad Air Canada is, compared to porter or even west jet I'm surprised anyone flys them, the people who work for them are clearly angry and the service is always expensive and bad. My most recent travel adventure with them, they fly out of someone else gates/desks at SJO, this is not messaged anywhere - I got to the airport early, and walked around trying to find the Air Canada desk, asking people, nobody seemed to know, checkin closes at 7, it's 6:55...finally find the checkin desk, Swiss Port branded (?) with an Air Canada uniform person, I swear to god she hit enter as she saw me running towards her and closed the flight, yes, I arrived at the desk exactly at 7:01. I called Air Canada and all I said was "how do I find the air Canada checkin desk in SJO?" and the response was, I kid you not, "why are you calling in to find that out?" I explained the situation, put me on hold, came back and explained that Air Canada only has a small team there, and no branded desks, and then in a very scolding tone (really, I was shocked): it was "my responsibility to figure this out in advance of travel, sir". I asked if they could help me rebook, told to "do it online".

Yeah sure, all my own fault I suppose, but also...bugger off Air Canada. </rant>

Noel recently covered Air Canada vs Porter: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_acPeCOY1I

fidotron · 1h ago
In fairness to Air Canada a few months ago they pleasantly surprised me. Admittedly long haul international, which does not seem to be as extremely bad as their domestic. Pearson is clearly a disaster area at this point, as that whole gold theft demonstrated.
tonyarkles · 57m ago
Yeah, I've been travelling around Canada and the US for two years now for work (~30 trips) and Air Canada had a dramatic improvement somewhere around Spring/Summer 2024. From November 2023 to around April 2024 I was keeping track of the probability of actually having my checked bags arrive at the destination and they were sitting around 60%. Since around Spring 2024 it improved dramatically, plus they started offering (mediocre) beer for free in economy!
belval · 26m ago
Not a big fan of Air Canada, but if you are flying out of Montreal (YUL) I find that they have the best airport integration overall by a wide margin. For international flights (excluding the US), my record from drop-off at the airport to sitting at the gate was 15 minutes and it never was more than 45 minutes. Their infotainment system is also pretty good overall, never had a dead screen in +10 flights at this point.

But I feel like the average person flying only a few times a year makes this very difficult to evaluate properly. My only experience with WestJet was abysmal, same for Delta. United was ok. Transat (much smaller) was good.

peab · 3m ago
air canada often has the only direct routes for me
msgodel · 3m ago
I actually know someone who did contract IT support for them. I'm kind of surprised by how at least the IT component operates. It looks to me like there are multiple middle men trying to outsource nearly their entire company to the absolute cheapest thing they can find.

Maybe all airlines work that way but I can't imagine that results in something functional.

andy99 · 22m ago
The worst part is that they forced her to gate-check this bag that would have fit in the overhead. I have seen them get really aggressive with this recently, including watching a gate agent approach an old couple who needed pre-boarding assistance and lie to them that their standard roller bag wouldn't fit on the plane and would need to be gate checked.

There was an article recently about Ryanair employees getting commissions when they force someone to check their carry-on, I suspect AC is doing the same thing.

silisili · 1m ago
Is gate checking a bad thing to most people?

I used to fly a ton, and preferred to gate check my bag. Didn't have to find or fight over overhead space, and I don't remember ever waiting more than a few minutes at the gate. Around half the time it was already waiting for me by the time I actually got off the plane. It almost felt like a valet service rather than a burden.

jordanb · 6m ago
FWIW I always travel with soft backpacks instead of hard-shell roller bags. I've never gotten the "you should gate check that". Soft bags fit much better in the overhead and can be squeezed to make room, so the airline employees will never pick the soft backpack guy for gate check.
usefulcat · 9m ago
What is the incentive for the airline to do this? Unless they are charging a fee for gate checking, which I've never heard of, this just seems like more work for the airline?
Macha · 4m ago
I know in the case of some airlines, it's because their luggage fare structure encourages people to use carry on rather than checked luggage, which results in the overhead space being oversubscribed. Even if each bag technically fits within the carry on requirements, there's not space for all of them.

Also as an intermediate step before gate checking bags, they usually make people take backpacks etc. out of the overhead because they _can_ fit in the under seat area, even if you didn't bring any other carry on items, which also disincentivises packing light - really you want to use a hard carry on that _has_ to go in the overhead to ensure that it goes in the overhead rather than be forced to give up some of your already limited legroom.

blitzar · 4m ago
> charging a fee for gate checking, which I've never heard of

You have lived a very sheltered life my friend.

So there is this thing that "other" people have to do when they need to fly somewhere. Its like when you give your friends a ride on your plane, but you dont know them and none of you own the plane. Every person pays a bit to fly from point a to point b. Its known as commercial air travel, and it is as horrible as it sounds.

bawolff · 4m ago
In my experience they are only aggressive during really full flights where it is a legit concern not everything will fit (largely because they started charging an arm and a leg for checked bags, so nobody does that anymore)
sjsdaiuasgdia · 3m ago
I could see Ryan Air charging for gate check even when it's not your choice and the bag is of appropriate carry-on size. That's their niche, sell you a cheap ticket then charge you for everything else they can along the way.

In my experience generally it's a combination of oversold flights and increased seat counts. Seat width and legroom length changes allow more seats to get crammed into the plane. You have more people, but the amount of overhead bin space doesn't change with it. With oversold flights it's very common for nearly all seats to be occupied.

The net result is the overhead bins almost always fill up before everyone has boarded, at which point they start gate checking everyone's carry-on bags. When this has happened to me on major carriers, I have not been charged. It's still annoying. Particularly when I've packed light to fit everything in a carry-on and avoid checked baggage altogether.

FireBeyond · 3m ago
Faster onloading and offloading time reduces gate time, which can easily snowball if you have other delays.
AnotherGoodName · 55m ago
Before the pitchforks get out of control here it could be as harmless as a couple of bags popping open in transit and the guys in baggage did their best to stuff everything back into the correct bag.
gruez · 49m ago
That doesn't really explain the ticket scanner though?
AnotherGoodName · 45m ago
Yes it does and the ticket scanner should put all the suggestions of it being malicious theft by immigrants (not you but there’s seriously posts along those lines here as of now) to rest.

Both baggage that’s popped open and loose items get put aside at some stage of loading.

A handler looks at it all and puts loose items in the nearest bags respectively and sends it forward to the lost bag crew. That’s pretty much the simplest explanation here.

creaturemachine · 32m ago
Including random IT gear from the storage closet? It absolutely was some airport property and random accumulated crap used to pad out the bag to hide the theft.
AnotherGoodName · 21m ago
There's probably some ticketing person that to this day are scratching their heads wondering where their scanner went after briefly placing it down on a baggage cart in the chaos of an airport.

This thread is really clutching at straws. This bag literally didn't make it through transit, which means the whole "they made it weigh the same to avoid flagging in transit" seem pretty stupid doesn't it? It was lost in transit and returned much later. Exactly what happens when a bag splits open and is put aside in the backroom.

hn_throwaway_99 · 12m ago
> This thread is really clutching at straws.

Fully agreed, but it's a bit baffling to me that you don't realize how you are the one clutching at straws. "There's probably some ticketing person that to this day are scratching their heads wondering where their scanner went after briefly placing it down on a baggage cart in the chaos of an airport" is simply like the least likely explanation for what happened.

FredPret · 6m ago
That ticket scanner looks like it uses a super-old serial port.

Is this what current ticket scanners use? It could be that some passenger had packed an old scanner they intended to use for some fun project. It's just the type of thing I might have done when I had time for such things.

kurthr · 7m ago
Exactly, I bet there's a weight associated with the bag so they need to make it within a kg or so to not get flagged.

What do we have that weighs 2 kilos? Hey, grab that thing over there!

slashdev · 27m ago
Air Canada is a terribly run airline. I avoid them whenever possible. They lost my luggage once and it took a year of badgering them to get them to pay up for it.
potato3732842 · 1h ago
Lost luggage gets opened and inventoried and tracked in a computer system. This should be easy to track down if they care.

What seems to have likely happened here is when the bag was on the way out of the lost stuff storage area someone noticed it had valuables and being one of the last people in the line of steps they took the valuables and put crap nobody would miss in its place.

Such a substitution must happen early, before the bag gets inventoried, or late when it's on its way out, because validating claims of what's in the bag is a key part in the process of how lost luggage is returned. It's less the bag would have gotten back to her if the substitution happened early because "hey I'm looking for a bag full of shoes" doesn't result in any hits when the shoes have been sub'd out for garbage. Furthermore, there's decent video and paper trailer for handling of baggage because otherwise it's a smuggling/theft/crime vector and the airports sell lost luggage in bulk so they don't want the good stuff going missing. The audit trail is less good for lost baggage exiting the system to its rightful owner because it was already subject to scrutiny on entry.

It is likely that this does ultimately get tracked down because lost luggage, at least in the US, is handled mostly by the airports themselves so the airline and airports will want to point the finger at each other and the truth should eventually come out. I'm sure when all the dust settles they'll fire a line employee and offer her $500 worth of air miles or some other completely unsatisfactory outome like that.

OJFord · 29m ago
> Lost luggage gets opened and inventoried and tracked in a computer system. This should be easy to track down if they care.

Lol. It also gets just left in the open. I came through YYZ from LHR a couple of days after my father in law from DEL, I was to ask someone about his lost bag but just happened to notice it amongst a bunch of others neatly to the side in baggage reclaim; so I just picked it up and walked out. Could've taken anyone else's too.

But then how bad is that anyway, because I can do the same thing at the carousel when it comes out without it ever being lost. Kind of wild there's no checks on it really.

throwmeaway222 · 58m ago
I don't fly anymore, but when I did - I didn't check baggage ever. Clothes I'm wearing and one more in my backpack.
qualeed · 31m ago
When I can, I try to do the same, but that's not very practical for many trips and/or travelers.
flying4781 · 6m ago
This isn't always an option any more. Everyone wants to bring their stuff onboard because of the horrors of checked baggage, so good luck having room in the overhead compartments if you're boarding zone 5. The article mentions "Royle says she was asked by an Air Canada representative to check her carry-on suitcase for her flight from Toronto to Newfoundland in March", so yeah Air Canada lost her carry on bag. I've witnessed pretty violating experiences with Air Canada with people trying to pack light and then getting stripped of their belongs "because there's no room in the cabin". At the end of the day you have to comply with airline employees.
agensaequivocum · 25m ago
I wish but I have to check my firearm.
reverendsteveii · 1h ago
This illustrates a dark pattern in the service industry that I really hate: deny people what they're entitled to by default and hope people give up. In this case this person had $1000 in stuff taken from them and the airline told her to file a claim, then denied it, then after they were contacted by a national news organization the re-reviewed the claim and it turns out there was nothing wrong with it at all. It's bullying, it's an attempt to use leverage to deny people what they're entitled to and it's simply wrong. Luckily airlines are too big to fail, or deliver what they sell, or follow basic regulations.
BenTr · 58m ago
It also depends on the airline, but mostly on the worker, I believe. Some people will go a lot further to help. For example, with Turkish Airlines, I saw how a worker immediately after landing came to find some passengers to tell them there was an issue with the baggage and spent lots of time helping them.
buckle8017 · 1h ago
Nearly every person doing baggage handling at Pearson is a temporary foreign slave... sorry I mean worker.

They have every reason to steal and no reasons not to.

cjbgkagh · 1h ago
This is becoming a pervasive problem and it almost seems like airlines are ok with it as another form of compensation. I left an item on my seat, noticed immediately after disembarking, went directly to the service desk and was given the runaround. Every step seemed to be set up to hinder any progress, never got my item back, but they were sure to let me know that I could possibly buy it back at a monthly auction.
soco · 52m ago
On the other hand I dropped a small wallet between chairs and when I flew back a week later it was handed to me directly - I had no idea where and when I lost it and didn't even get around putting up a claim. But that was another airline.