Airline passenger take mid-flight bets as Brisbane Airport delays become commonplace
BRISBANE airport is so bad at on-time arrivals that passengers have started taking bets on how late they will be.
Businessman Stephen Morris, from Hendra, said most of his flights into Brisbane in recent months had been forced to circle the sky as they awaited a landing slot.
"Usually it is around the Gold Coast when the pilot announces the plane is going into a holding pattern," he said.
"We (passengers) then start taking bets on how long it will be."
Mr Morris warned that business travellers who returned from trips to Melbourne and Sydney "have no nice words to say about (landing in) Brisbane".
"In my experience, flights are always delayed up to 40 minutes to an hour returning to Brisbane, while a previous flight I was on was diverted to the Gold Coast to pick up fuel, which turned a trip from Sydney to Brisbane into a three-hour trip."
Mr Morris, who regularly flies twice a week, said the problem had reached such a level that he wrote a letter to the CEO and managing director of the Brisbane Airport Corporation, Julieanne Alroe, to make her understand his frustration.
"It is socially disruptive, a huge waste of resources, and has become a reputation issue for Brisbane," he said.
More than 2.5 million passengers have been caught up in flight delays at Brisbane Airport in the past year but the airport's owners claim it can handle hundreds of extra aircraft every day.
The Courier-Mail has learnt more than 500,000 passengers on Qantas flights alone have been inconvenienced by delays in being able to land, as the airport gains an interstate reputation for hold-ups.
The figures come as tension builds among passengers fed up with delays and the impasse over the much-needed parallel runway, the long-term solution to the gridlock that would damage the state's economy.
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