High Peak Liberal DemocratsA recent high-profile incident in which a young man with cerebral palsy crawled off of a United Airlines flight is serving as a catalyst in the need for better accessibility measures in air travel for passengers with disabilities.
D'Arcee Neal, a 29-year-old with cerebral palsy, took a five-hour flight from San Francisco to Washington late last month when a mix-up at the gate meant there was no aisle chair - a narrow, specialized wheelchair to assist passengers with disabilities down an airplane aisle.
"Unfortunately, the airline did not comply with the law, which requires they provide assistance on and off the plane within a reasonable time," said Lee Page, senior associate advocacy director for Paralyzed Veterans of America.
Still, communication would have been key in remedying this error or preventing it altogether, Page said. "Better communication with ground crew, flight attendants and the boarding and contract workers would have provided the solution, but the reality is someone who needs assistance is going to be the last one off of the plane no matter what," he said.
Page said accessibility in air travel, even now - nearly 30 years since passage of the 1986 Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) - remains a challenge. "On my last flight, I had to sit in the bulkhead seat, which is the only place where the aisle armrest does not lift up," he said. "The assistance of the aisle chair transfer was tight, and that's because the aisle has become so narrow."
"It's also a reminder to clarify that air travel is governed by the ACAA, not the ADA [Americans with Disabilities Act]," she said. "That's a common misconception."
"Neal's case brought to light the challenges passengers with disabilities face when flying," Page said. "This went viral because people in the general population don't understand these challenges."
Brittany Ballenstedt is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in several publications, including Government Executive, National Journal, Technology Daily and NextGov.com
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