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As CVG’s volume increases, so does amount of stuff left behind- Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport lost and found
HEBRON, Ky. — Only a few days into October, Penny Kramer had been working as if it were mid-December and she was Santa Claus amid lost and forgotten toys.
Kramer, a department assistant for the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport lost and found Police, is largely in charge of the lost-and-found program, which has been increasingly — and sometimes, interestingly — bursting at the seams. Given that CVG is back in favor, it’s been a nearly full-time job just to manage the intake.
“We’re not even a full week in yet, and I’ve already gotten 100 items,” she said, rummaging through bins filled with forgotten wallets, baby items, gadgets and more.
Hurried travelers likely misplace millions of items at U.S. airports each year, but at CVG, there’s been a noticeable spike. Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport lost property
Since 2012, more than 29,000 items have been “found.” In 2016, that number topped 7,672 — a 76 percent increase over 2014, the first year it included TSA-recovered goods in that data.
This year, through early October, the airport is on pace to obliterate those gains with 6,652 lost items thus far. It already had a record June, and the holidays are upcoming. The Thanksgiving span is considered the busiest here by far.
CVG served more than 6.8 million passengers overall last year — an 8-percent bump — and wants to increase that number to 9 million by 2021.
“We’re up well above average across the board,” Kramer said. “As passenger volume goes up, so does lost and found.”
So what exactly gets left behind? There’s the usual: bags, laptops, belts, jewelry, cell phones and keys. Over 300 of the latter have been collected to date. But there are also oddities: surf boards, children’s Big Wheels, a wall vent, hula hoops, a single flip-flop – even underwear.
“You never know what you’re going to get,” Kramer said.
Each item, no matter how big or small, finds its way to the police department, where it’s logged and tagged — the date it was found, where it was discovered and a description. Everything is stored in a large, oversized closet on site, which is often overflowing.
“It’s a daily rearranging job in there,” Kramer said.
Anything lost can be recovered at the police department — it’s located near the terminal garage — during normal business hours, and there’s a section on the CVG website where owners can file a report. Per state law, anything left after 60 days is shipped over to the Boone County Sheriff’s Department, where it’s auctioned. Items like eyeglasses are donated to a charity.
Lost something at Airport or in a flight? Click here to report online
Dedicated investigation manager for every successful lost report. We work with more than 15000+ Airports & Airlines lost and found offices worldwide. Increase chance of locating your lost property TODAY.