You sent my mom where?

TAMPA, Fla. -- Vera Kuemmel paced Tampa International Airport late Monday, waiting for her 83-year-old mother's return from New York.

The plane had been on the ground for hours. Where was her mother? Not in baggage claim, where the two had agreed to meet.

It was after midnight when Kuemmel's cell phone rang, her mother's frightened voice barely audible on the other end.

Mom, indeed, was at baggage claim.

In San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Elfriede Kuemmel had been flown to San Juan instead of back home.

It seems the two flights shared one gate, and Elfriede got in the wrong line at the wrong time, her daughter speculates.

Vera had requested that her mother be given a wheelchair and helped to her plane. But boarding pass and all, attendants let her on the wrong flight.

"As much as they make you go through, I just don't understand it," Vera said. "Not that she needed to be hand-held, but you'd think someone would take her under their wing. It's just unbelievable."

Elfriede left Tampa for New York before dawn on Monday. The Tampa resident plans to move back to her native state and was interviewing for a possible apartment rental. She was scheduled to return to Tampa the same day. She didn't pack a change of clothes.

Things went wrong in Philadelphia, where Elfriede was supposed to switch planes.

And switch planes she did.

U.S. Airways spokeswoman Valerie Wunder confirmed the mistake. Wunder said she wasn't sure how Elfriede's boarding pass didn't raise a red flag.

"We are looking into what we could've done on our end to prevent that," Wunder said.

Pete Burgess, owner of Burgess Aviation Consultants and an expert in air traffic services, said attendants sometimes look at a list of scanned boarding passes before departing. But it's usually because potential passengers are on standby.

If no one was waiting for a seat, it's conceivable that the woman could have slipped on without notice. But that's no excuse, Burgess said.

"I bet they're embarrassed" Burgess said.

Airport officials in San Juan set Elfriede up with a hotel room and food while she waited for a 3:30 p.m. first-class flight home on Tuesday. It was the earliest U.S. Airways return available.

She was scheduled to make a connection in Charlotte, N.C., and arrive in Tampa at 9:30 p.m.

At last the plane touched down, and Elfriede emerged, escorted in a wheelchair by a skycap and looking weary.

She left the airport tram with her face covered with a black handkerchief, and didn't answer any questions until she had been reunited with her family and was about to depart at the curb outside the baggage area, where she paused.

The worst part about the trip was "just being lost,'' she said.

Asked how she liked Puerto Rico, she said, "I didn't see it. I was in the airport the whole time,'' although she did get to spend the night in a nearby hotel room courtesy of the airline.

She said she loved flying first class after the tiresome, unexpected diversion. She has never been to Puerto Rico before, she said, "and I'll never go again.'' Then she got into the family's car, and away they went.

Kim Wilmath can be reached at kwilmath(at)sptimes.com. For more stories visit scrippsnews.com

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Airline loses elderly woman

I just returned from a trip to Ft. Myers, Florida with my elderly mother and aunt. I specifically asked for wheelchairs for them and wouldn't you know it...none were ready during part of our trip! I can only imagine the terror that poor lady felt, not to mention her daughter when she showed to pick her up and she wasn't there. Airlines are still packing on fees even though the cost of fuel has dropped dramatically! You would think they could accomplish something SIMPLE like checking to see that a WHEELCHAIR BOUND PASSENGER GOT ON THE RIGHT DAMNED PLANE!

Airline Loses Elderly Woman

I work for this airline and have seen it all. I also worked for the airline that boarded a dead passenger a few years ago. If you care about your elderly parents, fly with them. As soon as I saw this I knew, Phildelphia. I did not even have to read the article. There are not enough people left in Phildelphia with a work ethic to staff the airport.

If it was MY MOTHER-I or

If it was MY MOTHER-I or another family member would be traveling with her to make sure she was cared for. It is not everyone else's responsibility to care for your loved one!

US Air

The last time I flew USAir I had a 1st class ticket, traveling as disabled from DFW to CLT to MYR. Except the CLT to MYR had no 1st class, and to make it worse a group of 6 older passengers waited at the gate with the flight number posted, finally a USAir rep showed up to say the flight had been changed to another gate in another terminal and was already in final boarding. I suggested they better contact the gate to hold flight and get us carts because we were not notified of the change of gate and our ages. When we finally got to the new gate there was no jetway we were expected to walk down stairs, up stairs to plane, down to exit plane at MYR and up stairs to enter airport! I ended up having an asthma attack and needed my inhaler and the stewardess was not to pleased that the flight was held and then needing to get my bag from overhead. I have NOT used USAir since! Since when is a passenger traveling as disabled required to climb 4 flights of stairs between Charlotte and Myrtle Beach?

You are SO correct! No one

You are SO correct!

No one cares anymore, particularly the anus that is affectionately known as Philadelphia. I refuse to fly through there until I die and UselesSAir loses my coffin and it ends up in Philthydelphia.

Thank you, as an employee, for being honest!

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