Los Angeles Times

Wait — what’d they say?

Can’t hear announceme­nts at the airport? Visual paging and apps are among options to break the sound barrier.

- By Yomi S. Wrong

Phil Bravin has logged a million miles on Delta and is as savvy a traveler as they come. But certain scenarios still vex the Vermont businessma­n.

Typically, it starts with a gate agent.

“They’ll be talking for five minutes,” he said, describing a scene familiar to millions of deaf and hardof-hearing travelers, “and I’ll go up and ask what they said and they’ll give me a two-word answer.”

He can’t always tell from that brief exchange what is going on.

Communicat­ion breakdowns can unravel even the most chill traveler, but consider that one of six baby boomers has hearing loss and that Generation Xers and millennial­s are not far behind. An estimated 14% of adults ages 20 to 69 have some hearing loss, according to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Or, put another way, millions of us can’t hear those airport announceme­nts.

“There are many stories from deaf and hard-of-hearing people missing flights, trains and other transporta­tion because announceme­nts were not available in visual form,” said Howard A. Rosenblum, chief executive and director of legal services for the National Assn. of the Deaf.

The civil rights group has pushed for more announceme­nt systems to be made accessible through visual and tactile means.

When airports fail to provide equivalent access to travelers with hearing disabiliti­es, the consequenc­e isn’t just annoyance; it can prompt legal action.

In 2002, deaf travelers sued San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport to make it more accessible.

The outcome of that class-action settlement is a design that benefits everyone: 80 additional visual paging screens at domestic and internatio­nal terminals, for a total of 140.

“Visual paging has been great,” said Christophe­r Birch, SFO’s director of guest experience. “It should exist everywhere.

“The monitors provide a text alternativ­e for passengers to retrieve pages and other important audible informatio­n that can get drowned out in the din of terminal noise.”

As part of the settlement, SFO increased the number of TTY telephones (special phones that allow communicat­ion to be typed) and improved signage and informatio­n on its website. The airport also installed video relay service on the arrival level of both terminals in case travelers need an American Sign Language interprete­r to help facilitate some aspect of a trip.

Those all-important alerts about flight delays and gate changes, however, are the domain of airlines. Birch and other experts suggest travelers download their airline’s app, because important informatio­n is pushed out to mobile devices. What else can you do? The Air Carrier Access Act requires airlines to ensure that passengers who identify themselves as needing visual or hearing assistance have prompt access to the same informatio­n provided to other passengers.

The Hearing Loss Assn. of America has more informatio­n about the regulation­s on its website (lat.ms /hearinglos­sassn).

Advocates recommend that deaf and hard-of-hearing travelers approach the staff at airports (and train stations) before boarding and establish their communicat­ion needs up front so they can be alerted to changes or updates.

Because that doesn’t always work, Bravin and his colleagues, including Chris Wagner, who is also deaf, use technology to deal with barriers.

As executives at Purple Communicat­ions, which provides services to deaf and hard-of-hearing individual­s, these frequent fliers rely on apps and smartphone­s.

“I’m always on the run,’’ said Wagner, who makes biweekly business trips between Florida and California. He likes the Sam trip planner and assistant app, available for Android and iOS.

“It lets me know if there’s a time change with a flight or a gate change with a flight,” Wagner said.

If he misses a flight, the app will connect him with a dedicated travel assistant. “It’s easier for me than having to go to the gate . . . and struggle to communicat­e,” he said.

Purple’s P3 app, free on Android and iOS, lets users place video calls with an American Sign Language interprete­r. This is handy if Bravin needs to call the airline.

“With the app, I am able to talk directly to anyone, any time,” he said. travel@latimes.com

 ?? San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport ?? V I S UA L paging screens help with communicat­ion breakdowns at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport.
San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport V I S UA L paging screens help with communicat­ion breakdowns at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport.

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