09/21/2021 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/22/2021 17:42
BART Customer Service representative Michelle Pallen-Mendiola poses with staff in front of merchandise booth at a community event
Daniel was on a plane ready to depart at SFO with his family for a wedding, concerned whether his parked car at Millbrae would be ticketed or even towed after he experienced payment issues with his airport parking permit. He sent an email to BART Customer Services as a prayer. Minutes later, he received a call.
As the plane stood ready to depart, BART's Customer Service representative Michelle Pallen-Mendiola spoke to Daniel about his parking permit issues and worked quickly to resolve the matter. She fixed the permit payment issue and gave BART Police a notice not to tow Daniel's car.
"She really saved my family and I," wrote Daniel in an email to BART Customer Services giving feedback on Michelle. "I've never had such amazing customer service from any organization. Even the gate agent at Millbrae Station was incredibly helpful. Thank you, BART!"
For Michelle, it's just the daily work fielding emails, calls, and referred tweets to provide the best customer service BART can provide. Since 2013, Michelle has answered thousands of inquiries and complaints, some laced with rage and profanity, some dressed in desperation or curiosity.
"It's an honor," said Michelle to Daniel's compliment. "All I'm doing is just my job providing customers answers to their inquiries, questions, and complaints while maintaining a positive attitude."
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, BART Customer Services have largely been working remotely. Previously, the department could huddle and speak in-person to get a question answered; now they rely on software like Microsoft Teams or Salesforce cloud platforms to communicate with each other and work to solve new customer cases.
Likewise with the ridership decline on BART since the pandemic, the volume of customer service complaints has declined overall, said Michelle. However, there is enough to keep her and her colleagues busy.
In recent months, daily fee and permit parking payments transitioning to the official BART app has been Michelle's main workload as she walks customers through technical steps to transition their BART parking permits. But she says the most frequent topics remain unchanged: a train in need of a clean-up, a broken air-conditioned unit on a train car, and lots of people misplacing their phones.
BART Customer Service representative Michelle Pallen-Mendiola poses with the Clipper card mascot
"People still lose everything in the system," said Michelle.
For a clean-up or something which requires assistance from a frontline staffer, Michelle recommends riders know the location -- a train car number, or where it is in the station -- when calling Customer Services. Knowing the location, Michelle says, can greatly help Customer Services forward a case to the correct frontline staff to handle it as quickly as possible.
Another recommendation: have the official BART app on your smartphone. The app, Michelle notes, has real-time departures, a BART Trip Planner, fare calculator, a biohazard report page, parking payments and much more.
But Michelle acknowledges that not all her work is about providing immediate solutions to questions; it's also emotionally being present for riders who've become upset by something that happened on BART.
"If the caller is irate, we listen and not interrupt them if they are on a roll and vent," said Michelle. "A lot of the time they just want to vent. Recognize what the issue is and determine how we can rectify this situation."