Find » Travel » Airport Auction Turns Lost Baggage ...

Airport Auction Turns Lost Baggage into Bucks

By G. Keith Evans, published Jul 29, 2008
Published Content: 43  Total Views: 26,802  Favorited By: 5 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.0 of 5
Have you ever wondered what happens when someone walks off and leaves their bag at airport security? How about all those folks who can't - or won't - pay those pricey new checked baggage fees? Hundreds of people who turned out to Miami International Airport's annual baggage auction found out first hand just how many of those bags existed and how much they are worth.

Every time someone walks off and leaves a bag at security, it is carefully screened by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to determine if it is one of those infamous "suspicious bags" that occasionally shut down airport terminals and grab national news headlines. If the bag fails to raise the TSA's bushy eyebrows, it is tucked away in the airport's massive Lost and Found office.

Although the overwhelming majority of "lost" luggage is claimed within 24 hours, thousands of bags ultimately go unclaimed every year. Smaller airports around the nation, those that lack the resources to hold their own auctions or have too few unclaimed bags to auction off, ship their unclaimed loot to the airport "lost products" store in Scotsborro, Alabama. This store opens the bags, 60% of which contain nothing more than clothing, and sell both the contents and the bags themselves to the public. Larger airports, though, like Miami International, instead accumulate hundreds of bags and auction them off to the public.

Miami International has hosted this annual auction for eleven (11) years now, and some of the goods have been impressive... and amusing. While the airport's 2007 auction featured the usual travel tagalongs (cameras, watches, cell phones, suitcases, camcorders and portable video games), it also raised a considerable amount of money from left behind laptop computers, iPods and even several iMac desktop computers. The belle of the 2007 ball, though, was-of all things - a washing machine. No details are available on why the washing machine was in the airport in the first place, and MIA did not elaborate on the machine's specifics.

Airport Auction Turns Lost Baggage into Bucks
Date: July 26, 2008
Miami, FL USA
Takeaways
  • Miami International Airport has held an annual baggage auction since 1997
  • Smaller airports send their unclaimed bags to a store in Scotsborro, AL to be sold
  • A lucky bidder in 2002 walked away with a suitcase containing $10,000 in cash
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Advertisment