From the BBC:
“Airports make 'significant'
progress helping disabled”
UK airports have made
"significant improvements" in providing assistance for passengers
with mobility problems, the industry regulator has said. The Civil Aviation
Authority (CAA) said that for the first time, no airports had been given a
"poor" rating. Manchester, which was the only airport to receive
"a poor" rating last year, was moved out of the lowest category. However,
it was told to take immediate action to reverse a recent decline in
performance. The CAA said that in April, when Manchester switched to a new
provider of special assistance, "the transition did not go as well as
planned". "We have told senior management we expect immediate and
effective action to be taken to reverse this recent decline in
performance," the CAA said in its report. In response, Manchester Airport
said: "We acknowledge that there is further to go and we are investing
significant additional resources to improve services for passengers in this
area, regardless of their accessibility or other requirements." In March,
a woman with chronic fatigue syndrome accused Manchester Airport of treating
her like "cargo" and "cattle" following a long-haul flight.
Jessica Stafford, 29, booked a special assistance service as she needed help to
move through the airport. But she found the experience "distressing"
and "humiliating" after being asked to walk to collect her own
wheelchair. She said she was told understaffing was to blame. Jessica Stafford
said at one stage she was asked to walk to collect a wheelchair The report from the CAA is its fourth annual
assessment of mobility assistance. It
found that a record 3.7 million passengers were assisted at 31 airports between
1 April 2018 and 31 March this year. The CAA rated the service of 14 airports
as "very good", and 16 as "good". Only Manchester was
classified as "needs improvement". "These results show
significant improvements to the experience many disabled passengers faced
before our reporting began," said Paul Smith, consumers and markets
director at the CAA. "While it is good to see the general improvements,
airports will need to continue to work hard to improve," it added. In a
statement the disability equality charity Scope said: "There are problems
in airports, and problems on planes. Often problems happen when one company
'hands off' to another and it's unclear to the disabled passenger who is
responsible. "So while it's good to see progress from the airports, and
impressive no airport is ranked failing this year, there are problems that
don't fall under the CAA remit that need to be addressed."
^ I hope this report is true. I
have travelled through some British airports with a person in a wheelchair many
times over the years and London-Heathrow was by far the worst I ever
experienced. It was like being in a Third World country with the Special
Assistance Area smelly and dark with people in wheelchairs left unattended for
long periods of time. The disabled deserve so much better. ^
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