U.S. Offers New Rules to Help Air Travelers in Wheelchairs.

By Mark Walker. The Transportation Department said the proposed regulations
would make it easier to hold airlines accountable for mishandling
passengers' wheelchairs. 

The Biden administration announced on Thursday that it was proposing new
regulations for how airlines must treat passengers in wheelchairs, an effort
aimed at improving air travel for people with disabilities.. 

Under the proposal, damaging or delaying the return of a wheelchair would be
an automatic violation of an existing federal law that bars airlines from
discriminating against people with disabilities. The Transportation
Department said that change would make it easier for the agency to penalize
airlines for mishandling wheelchairs. 

The proposed regulations would also require more robust training for workers
who physically assist disabled passengers or handle their wheelchairs. 

'There are millions of Americans with disabilities who do not travel by
plane because of inadequate airline practices and inadequate government
regulation, but now we are setting out to change that,' Transportation
Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement. 'This new rule would change
the way airlines operate to ensure that travelers using wheelchairs can
travel safely and with dignity. 

For people in wheelchairs, flying can be difficult and uncomfortable, and
airline mishaps can make for an even more agonizing experience. More than
11,000 wheelchairs and scooters were mishandled by airlines last year,
according to data reported to the Transportation Department. 

The proposed regulations add to earlier moves by the Biden administration
intended to improve the flying experience for disabled travelers. In 2022,
the Transportation Department published a bill of rights for airline
passengers with disabilities. Last year, the agency finalized new
regulations to require more commercial aircraft to have accessible
bathrooms. 

Senator Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, a former Army helicopter pilot who uses
a wheelchair after losing both her legs in the Iraq war, noted that airlines
had previously fought unsuccessfully against a rule that requires them to
disclose the number of wheelchairs and scooters they mishandle. Ms.
Duckworth said that since airlines began reporting those numbers several
years ago, she had noticed improvements at airports around the country. 

Ms. Duckworth, a Democrat and the chairwoman of the Senate Commerce
Committee's aviation subcommittee, said she hoped the proposed regulations
would lead to a higher level of accountability for airlines. But she added
that Congress should take steps to protect the policies that the Biden
administration is moving to put in place. 

'This rule could be overturned by a future Department of Transportation
under a different administration,' said Ms. Duckworth, who attended an event
at the White House on Thursday where Mr. Buttigieg discussed the new
proposal. 

At the event, Carl Blake, the chief executive of Paralyzed Veterans of
America, which had petitioned the Transportation Department to develop new
regulations to improve the boarding and deplaning process for disabled
passengers, said he had never met a member of his organization who flew and
whose wheelchair had not been damaged at one point or another. 

Mr. Blake said the problem urgently needed to be addressed, and he
emphasized the importance of using the new regulations to hold airlines
accountable. 'A rule with no enforcement is no rule at all,' he said. 

In a statement, a spokeswoman for Airlines for America, a trade group
representing the country's largest air carriers, said that airlines had been
making strides to improve the flying experience for disabled passengers
through steps like enhancing training for employees. 

'U.S. airlines are committed to offering a high level of customer service
and providing a positive and safe flight experience for passengers with
disabilities,' said the spokeswoman, Hannah Walden. 

Public comments on the proposed regulations will be accepted for 60 days.
The Transportation Department did not specify a timeline for when the new
measures could be finalized.. PHOTO: The proposed regulations would require
additional training for workers. (PHOTOGRAPH BY SCOTT MCINTYRE FOR THE NEW
YORK TIMES) This article appeared in print on page B5..

 

 

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