From the CBC:
“Air Canada promised to become more accessible. But hidden cameras show it's still falling short”
Paralympian Brock Richardson
landed in Fredericton already knowing that a piece of equipment he requested
before the trip would not be there to help move him from his seat to his
wheelchair. But he didn't expect an Air
Canada staff member would also attempt to separate him from the person
responsible for his care. Richardson,
who has cerebral palsy, was told that his support person would have to get off
the plane before employees would lift him onto a narrow wheelchair that would
take him down the aisle of the plane. It's a request that Richardson said
"unsettled" him. "I've never been asked for my attendant to
leave the aircraft," Richardson told the Air Canada employee. "Never.
And I'm not comfortable with that at all."
Months after Air Canada committed
to immediate action to improve the experience of customers with disabilities, a
Marketplace team went undercover with Richardson in May to see whether the
airline had followed through on its promises from Nov. 9, 2023. The pledges came after a series of unsafe and
demeaning incidents involving customers who use wheelchairs and a Marketplace
investigation that uncovered serious issues with staff training, among other
shortfallings. Air Canada said it would invest in equipment — like the lift
Richardson requested, board customers who require staff assistance to get to
their seat before anyone else and to seat them at the front of the cabin they
book. And it also promised enhanced training for employees. But Marketplace's
hidden cameras documented the airline falling short of multiple announced
improvements during a round-trip flight from Toronto to Fredericton it paid for
Richardson to take for the investigation.
For passengers like Richardson,
air travel can be accompanied by considerable risk and discomfort. Passengers
who use wheelchairs have been injured during transfers to and from their seats
and Marketplace heard from several people who said their wheelchairs were
damaged. . Once Richardson is in his plane seat, he can't get to the bathroom
so he has to manage how much he eats and drinks when he's travelling. Not all
airports have a lift used to transfer a passenger with disabilities between
their wheelchair and plane seat. And that can mean someone has to rely on staff
to physically pick them up and place them on a narrower wheelchair and then
again to get onto their seat. It can be uncomfortable, Brock Richardson says. "I
enjoy just the atmosphere of travelling in general," he said, noting it's
something he did often as a boccia player. "I just enjoy being [in]
different places." It's getting there that can be the difficulty, he said.
Last year, Air Canada committed
to "consistently" boarding customers who need help transferring from
a wheelchair to a seat "before all other customers," saying they
would be seated "at the front of the cabin they booked." And though
Richardson needed that extra assistance, Marketplace documented three people
boarding before him on the return flight to Toronto. For Richardson, boarding before other
passengers isn't a perk — it's a matter of dignity. "There is a lot of vulnerability that
goes on when you're being transferred. And I didn't sign up for that to be
amongst the public."
Air Canada's vice president in
charge of customer experience told Marketplace that Richardson's case was an
exception. "We were requested by
authorities to board a number of other customers before and we are following
the instruction," said Tom Stevens, adding that the airline is confident
the policy is "being delivered correctly." But boarding issues
continued for Richardson; when he was transferred to his seat, he found himself
in rows 20 and 21 on his two flights — despite the Air Canada promise that
those needing lift assistance would sit at the front of the cabin they booked. When
Marketplace asked the airline about the broken promise, Stevens replied that
because the booking was "relatively recent … the forward rows [had]
already sold." If that's how the policy is applied, it leaves too much to
chance, said Jeff Preston, an accessibility advocate and associate professor of
disability studies at King's University College — and it doesn't serve the
needs of people with disabilities. Those should be prioritized, he said. "If
you go to the movie theatre, for instance, there are spots that are designated
for people with disabilities," he said. "If they don't need it, then
those seats are able to open up."
'You've taken my choice away' Richardson
isn't alone in not having a lift available at his destination airport. The same
thing happened to Alessia Di Virgilio in Charlottetown, the first time
Marketplace tested Air Canada's accessibility in August 2023. Brock says the
lift equipment is more comfortable; a sling can transfer a passenger directly
from their wheelchair to their seat. Without that equipment, staff have to pick
someone up twice — first to transfer them from their wheelchair to a narrower
aisle chair and then again to place them on the plane seat. So when Richardson
was told there would be no lift available in Fredericton when he booked the
trip a week before departure, the athlete said he felt the airline had taken
away his autonomy in deciding how to be safely transferred onto the plane. "The
first thing I thought of was, well, you've taken my choice away," he said.
"You've taken my ability to make that decision. You've taken my ability to
be comfortable." Though a
lift was not available for Richardson, Air Canada had ordered 27 lifts from
Australia in December 2023 and they were expected to start arriving in June,
Stevens said last May. An update from the airline in October said those lifts
have since been delivered, including one in Fredericton. "At present we have our own lifts, or
access to third-party lifts, at all but 14 of the 50 stations we currently
serve in Canada," wrote Air Canada spokesperson Peter Fitzpatrick in an
email. He said the airline is considering buying more lifts for the remaining
14 locations or arranging for a shared purchase with other airlines or the
airports themselves. In May,
after Richardson's flight, Marketplace asked then-Transport Minister Pablo
Rodriguez about the prospect of a federal mandate to ensure that lifts are
available at every airport. "We're
considering all the options because we all have to do better," he said in
response.
Confrontation with staff
raises questions about training Richardson is still waiting for answers
about why his support person, Kathrine Vatcher, was told to leave the plane
while the transfer team moved him from his seat to an aisle chair in
Fredericton. "We got it [the
direction] from management not too long ago," an Air Canada employee told
the athlete on the plane, adding that Vatcher was being asked to leave because
she wasn't going to physically assist during the transfer. Richardson and Vatcher pushed back
repeatedly against the staff member; the stalemate broke when the transfer team
arrived and allowed Vatcher to stay but asked her to move back. Stevens
said in May that Air Canada would investigate the incident. "The main thing that we're trying to
do is ensure that the lift for the customer is in a safe and controlled
way," he said. "On some aircraft that might mean that we need more
space." Since that interview, Marketplace has followed up with Air
Canada twice to find out whether the request was a company policy, but the team
has yet to receive an answer on this issue. Instead, the incident raised
more questions about the effectiveness of the promise of enhanced training to
"improve all aspects of employee interactions with customers with
disabilities." "I'm baffled," said Preston, the associate
professor of disability studies. "There are probably a lot of things that
this [support] person might be needed for in a possibly very urgent time frame.
And you shouldn't be separating people." When Brock Richardson
lands at Fredericton International Airport, an Air Canada staff member boards
the plane and says his support person can't stay for the transfer from his seat
to an aisle chair, because she won't be physically assisting.
Concerns about privacy and
consent Richardson told Marketplace he felt violated after one of the
team's journalists observed an Air Canada manager in Toronto appearing to
record his transfer from his wheelchair to the lift without his consent. Initially,
Air Canada would not confirm whether Richardson had been recorded, saying only
that it might "take photos occasionally" of a wheelchair "to
ensure that there's no damage once that's being stowed in the cargo hold."
Steven said the airline would investigate. After repeated attempts to get clarity,
Marketplace received an email in October saying "only the empty chair was
photographed" for tracking and quality control. The airline
contacted Richardson for feedback and expressed regret about his experience. It
also offered him a $1,000 coupon as a "gesture of goodwill" and sent
him the pictures of his empty wheelchair at his request.
The new transport minister
responds Shortly after the flight, Marketplace spoke to then-Transport
Minister Pablo Rodriguez at the first National Air Accessibility Summit in
Ottawa. "Collectively, we
have to do better," he said then, after hearing about Richardson's
experience. Anita Anand, who was
appointed to the portfolio in September, said in a statement that she's working
with Canadian airlines to make sure "improvements are being made and that
the rights of passengers with disabilities are upheld." "Accessible air travel isn't
optional," the statement said. "It's essential, and we expect all
airlines to do their part." She did not, however, comment on
whether a federal mandate could be expected regarding access to lifts. Richardson
said there's a lot of room for improvement. "We need to see more moving
forward," he said. "I think we now know that we need to be better as
a whole community."
^ Clearly Air Canada failed with Accessibility
boarding and flying in the past and they continue to fail at it in the present.
The Canadian Government needs to
do a lot MORE to ensure that all Canadians (Disabled and Non-Disabled) have a
safe and pleasant boarding and flying experience. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/marketplace/air-canada-promises-accessible-transit-hidden-camera-1.7369146
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