From the DW:
“People with disabilities lack
accessible travel in Germany”
(Jonas Morgenroth faces
considerable challenges while traveling)
Many people with disabilities
face serious challenges traveling around Germany. Despite positive lip service
on the part of the incoming government, it is not clear how it specifically
plans to improve the situation. Jonas Morgenroth, a 34-year-old engineer from
Göttingen, relies on a wheelchair. When he wants to go on vacation, things
often get complicated. Train platforms and narrow hotel room doors can become
insurmountable obstacles. Once, several years ago when he wanted to go to
Bulgaria for a friend's wedding, the airline refused to take him. The plane was
too small and there was no room for his wheelchair, they said. He was also once
denied a train trip because the disabled toilet on the train didn't work.
"It was about a 20-minute ride, which was really a joke," Morgenroth
told DW. Most of the time train travel isn't an issue, he said, though it does
involve a great deal of planning. Buying a ticket via app is not possible.
Instead, Morgenroth has to book using a fee-based hotline at least 24 hours
before departure. "That's just annoying," says Morgenroth — and
that's why he often relies on his own specially outfitted car.
Too few commitments from
tourism industry
(Volker Sieger advises public
authorities on how to improve accessibility)
Volker Sieger, head of the
Federal Center of Expertise on Accessibility, knows how difficult travel can
still be in many places for the 13 million people with disabilities in Germany.
He and his team advise public authorities and administrations, as well as
businesses and civil society groups, on how they can improve accessibility. Significant
improvements have been made in recent years, especially in the construction and
IT sector. When it comes to travel, however, the situation remains
"poor," Sieger told DW. This is mainly due to the fact that companies
are not legally obliged to make their facilities barrier-free. Without such
prodding, few go to the trouble of making hotels and vacation homes fully
accessible to all. One glimmer of hope was Germany's Accessibility Act, based
on an EU directive, which requires companies to make their digital products and
services widely accessible by 2025. But associations for the disabled
criticized the law for narrowly targeting the digital realm. "Germany has
not gone beyond what the EU has mandated, although that would have been
possible," said Sieger. The new law will be of little help in making
traveling easier for people with disabilities.
Certified accessibility
(Schrader of the German Tourism
Academy is working to make things better for disabled travelers)
Rolf Schrader wants to remedy
this situation. He is the managing director of the German Tourism Academy
(DSFT) and heads the "tourism for all" project. His Berlin-based
association uniformly tests, trains and certifies tourist attractions and
services for people with disabilities. "We have realized that voluntary
self-assessments are not enough," said Schrader in an interview with DW. A
professional system similar to the star rating system for hotels was needed to
give people with disabilities a reliable guide to plan their trips. "If a
hotel is certified by us, the competition will have to consider following
suit," said Schrader. And indeed, accessible travel is on the rise —
despite the fact that the tourism industry has been hard hit by the COVID-19
pandemic.
(Bernburg castle has been
certified as fully accessible)
In July, Bernburg — a town in the
eastern German state of Saxony-Anhalt — became the seventh in Germany to be
certified as a barrier-free tourist destination by the DSFT. Many local tourist
attractions there, like its impressive castle, are fully accessible to people
with disabilities. Working together with representatives for the disabled and
senior citizens, the city has spent years making these improvements in the
town. "We saw the need to increase our focus on these target groups,"
said Susan Rettig, deputy head of Bernburg's city information office, in an
interview with DW. In Bernburg, senior citizens and families with small
children will also benefit from the barrier-free offerings, Rettig says. But
pioneers like Bernburg are a rarity in Germany. The proportion of certified
barrier-free tourist attractions remains tiny, says Schrader. "It is a
voluntary system and the certification has to be paid for, so we don't reach
many people." In addition, funding for the "tourism for all"
project from the Ministry for Economic Affairs is set to expire next March. If
funding is not prolonged by then, this would prove to be problematic, Schrader
added.
New German coalition lukewarm
on accessibility The incoming government wants to take a big step forward
in terms of accessibility. At least, that's what it sounds like in the recently
published coalition agreement of the Social Democrats, Greens and Liberals. Accessibility
is to be expanded in almost all areas of society, from sports to culture to
transportation, with a whole paragraph on the subject of "inclusion."
It reads: "We want Germany to become barrier-free in all areas of public
and private life, but especially in mobility (including Deutsche Bahn rail
services), housing, health care and the digital sector." A federal
accessibility program is to be set up for this purpose. However, the
"tourism" chapter lacks mention of the issue of accessibility. Sieger
finds this "disappointing." This is mainly due to the fact that
tourism falls under the responsibility of the individual federal states, he
pointed out. "The federal government can only provide additional support,
for example by promoting standardized certification," Sieger said. For
now, Morgenroth will probably have to keep painstakingly researching
wheelchair-accessible travel options. But things are not all bad. He raves
about a previous North Sea mudflat hike, and his trip to Australia. "I do
everything that other people do, I live a completely normal life — even if it
sometimes involves a bit more effort."
^ I’ve travelled around Germany
with someone in a wheelchair and even with all the pre-planning, pre-booking
and confirmations it was not easy and there were lots of issues to overcome. A lot more needs to be done and a lot more should be done. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/people-with-disabilities-lack-accessible-travel-in-germany/a-60000506
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