From the CBC:
“Passengers
with disabilities say they want to remain in wheelchairs on flights”
(James
Glasbergen of Kitchener, Ont., is calling on airlines and regulators to allow
passengers who rely on wheelchairs to remain seated in their wheelchairs when
flying.)
When James
Glasbergen boarded an Air Transat flight departing from Toronto to London on
June 30, he was excited to begin his journey to see the Rolling Stones play
live in Europe. What the 46-year-old quadriplegic man from Kitchener, Ont.,
wasn't looking forward to was getting out of his custom-fitted electric
wheelchair and into an airplane seat, as required by federal law. His concerns
turned out to be warranted after airline staff helping to transfer Glasbergen
to his seat dropped him in the aisle, setting off a more than three-minute
struggle to lift the 200-plus-pound man from the floor and set him upright. "There
wasn't enough room for them to get me into the seat, and they dropped me,"
said Glasbergen, a former travel agent who is paralyzed from the chest down due
to injuries suffered during a car accident in 1992. "All of a sudden, my body hit the floor
with a big thud." A video Glasbergen posted to YouTube captured the
moments just after he fell. It shows him wedged between the seat and a
wheelchair while two men struggle to lift him over an armrest and into a seat.
James
Glasbergen, who is paralyzed from the chest down, was dropped by airline staff
who were helping him transfer from a wheelchair to an airplane seat on an Air
Transat flight in Toronto on June 30. After two failed attempts, a flight
attendant and another passenger step in to help and the group successfully
seats him. "It's gone beyond frustration and shock. Now, I'm just
angry," Glasbergen said, adding it's not the first time he's been dropped.
"There's absolutely no dignity for people with disabilities that need
assistance transferring." Glasbergen is calling on airlines and regulators
to figure out a way to allow wheelchair users to remain seated in their
personal mobility devices when they fly, as they can on buses and trains. Between the hassle, potential injuries and
damage to wheelchairs stowed alongside luggage, people who rely on wheelchairs
for mobility, advocates and the U.S. transportation secretary, argue it's time
to make air travel more accessible so people living with disabilities have a
more equitable flying experience. "If they can figure out how to fly a
helicopter on Mars, they can figure out how to get wheelchair users sitting in
their wheelchairs safely," Glasbergen said. "It's not something that's going to take
weeks or days because obviously some cabin reconfiguration might have to be
done … I just want to see progress."
Transfer
mishaps, damaged wheelchairs In an email statement to CBC Toronto, Air
Transat apologized and said it is in contact with Glasbergen to discuss how to
improve future travel experiences. “Transfer
services on the ground are handled by a third-party contractor and we are
actively investigating this incident to avoid any recurrence,"
spokesperson Marie-Christine Pouliot wrote. Toronto resident Melissa Graham, who lives
with a mobility disability, says sitting in an airplane seat is hard on her
body. But the negative experiences
passengers like Graham and Glasbergen face when flying extend beyond being
required to sit in a seat. Graham says her wheelchair was damaged twice on the
same WestJet trip from Toronto to Winnipeg over the Canada Day weekend.
(Toronto
resident Melissa Graham says flying is a stressful experience for her because
she's required to leave the comfort of her wheelchair and sit in an airplane
seat, but also because her wheelchair has been damaged multiple times in the
past.)
According to
Graham, she noticed when she arrived in Winnipeg that one of the mud flaps that
covered her electric wheelchair's wheels had broken off, while the backrest she
relies on for support and balance was damaged on the return flight. WestJet
confirmed that Graham has an "open claim" for damages, saying its
service provider will contact her about resolving it. "It's incredibly
frustrating. It makes flying in general very stressful," said Graham. "I've
flown six times since last December, and I haven't had a single flight where
I've been able to feel completely comfortable."
The Canadian
Transportation Agency (CTA), the federal air travel regulator, says it has
received 247 wheelchair-related air accessibility complaints over the last five
years. Eighteen concerned damage to wheelchairs, while 214 were related to
wheelchair assistance. But that data only includes complaints to the regulator
and not those when a passenger dealt directly with an airline. While Canada-specific data isn't available,
the largest airlines in the U.S. lost or damaged at least 15,425 wheelchairs or
scooters between the end of 2018 and June 2021, the Washington Post reported
last year, citing data from the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Air safety
standards For safety reasons, federal regulations currently require
passengers who use wheelchairs to sit in airplane seats and most mobility
devices must be stowed in the cargo hold along with travellers' luggage. The
regulations require airlines to ensure properly trained staff conduct
wheelchair transfers and reimburse passengers for the cost of repairing or
replacing mobility devices that are damaged in transit. CTA says no plane or mobility aid designs that
would allow people to remain in their wheelchairs have been fully tested and
certified to meet the air safety standards of the U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) — which Canada follows. "Should wheelchairs and a
wheelchair restraint system for use in the cabin receive certification, we
would consider whether a regulatory amendment is appropriate," CTA said in
a statement.
Progress in
the U.S.
(U.S.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, pictured here in May, says his
department is working on a rule that would allow wheelchair users to remain in
their wheelchairs while flying.)
Movement on
the issue could soon come from south of the border. Just last week, U.S. Transportation
Secretary Pete Buttigieg said his department is working on a rule "in the
months and years ahead" that would allow passengers to stay in their
wheelchairs while they fly. "We
know this won't happen overnight, but it is a goal we have to work to
fulfil," Buttigieg said at an event Tuesday. Last September, a committee of experts
convened by the U.S. Transportation Research Board (TRB) concluded a
preliminary study into systems which use straps similar to a seat belt or other
mechanism to secure a wheelchair to an airplane's floor. It found most
airliners in use have a main boarding door wide enough for most personal
wheelchairs, and that the interior of the most common models — the Boeing 737
and the Airbus A320 — would require only "modest" modifications to
create an area where a wheelchair could be secured. "The committee did not
identify any issues," the study said, that "call into question the
technical feasibility of an in-cabin wheelchair securement system." The
CTA says it is aware of the study and is monitoring the issue, but that more
research is required.
(Michele
Erwin, founder and president of the Texas-based non-profit All Wheels Up, says
her organization has conducted crash tests of wheelchairs and tie-down systems
with the aim of proving they can meet U.S. air safety standards.)
Michele Erwin,
founder and president of the Texas-based non-profit All Wheels Up, said her
organization has been working with the airline industry and the U.S. government
to prove that current-market wheelchairs and tie-down systems can meet the same
safety standards as airline seats. Erwin
said All Wheels Up has conducted initial crash tests of various wheelchair
securement systems made by Q'Straint, a leading manufacturer of wheelchair
securement systems for motor vehicles and trains, all of which passed. "What we have learned from our crash
testing is that a wheelchair spot is technically feasible," said Erwin. In the wake of the TRB study, Erwin said the
airline industry has been developing wheelchair spot concepts, some of which
include a replaceable seat in the first row of a plane that can be taken out
and put back in depending on whether a passenger on the flight requiring
wheelchair accommodation. For wheelchair users like Glasbergen, turning
concepts into reality can't come soon enough. "It's not good enough to say
that's a safety issue anymore," he said. "Things need to change — it's 2022."
^ I have
traveled Domestically and Internationally with a person who used a Manual
Wheelchair and know the hassles and problems the airports, airlines and
everyone else create to make flying while Disabled extremely difficult.
Hopefully, the US and Canada will allow those who use a Wheelchair to remain in
them while on the plane. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/air-travel-wheelchairs-1.6536252
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.