National Post

Westjet CEO apologizes for accessibil­ity failures

Von Hoensbroec­h cites measures to improve

- Christophe­r reynolds

AS A BLIND PASSENGER, I DREAD ENTERING CANADIAN AIRSPACE, BECAUSE I NEVER KNOW HOW GOOD OR BAD WILL BE MY TREATMENT. — DAVID LEPOFSKY, CHAIR OF THE ACCESSIBIL­ITY FOR ONTARIANS WITH DISABILITI­ES ACT ALLIANCE

Westjet chief executive Alexis von Hoensbroec­h apologized for incidents where the airline failed to accommodat­e people living with disabiliti­es, saying he hopes to improve travel accessibil­ity.

“To our guests who didn’t have a good travel experience with us, we are sincerely sorry, and we are committed in doing better,” von Hoensbroec­h said during a House of Commons transport committee hearing on accessible transporta­tion on Thursday.

More than 99.9 per cent of the carrier’s 260,000-plus customers who required support last year — roughly 700 each day, the vast majority of whom used mobility aids — had a good experience, he said.

“Every case that goes wrong is one too many,” the chief executive said.

The appearance followed a committee hearing last week that saw lawmakers take Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau to task over “shocking” failures around accessibil­ity.

Rousseau acknowledg­ed mistakes, and pointed to an expedited accessibil­ity scheme announced in November along with new measures to improve the travel experience for hundreds of thousands of passengers living with a disability.

Multiple incidents have surfaced at Canadian airlines over the past year.

A B.C. man with spastic cerebral palsy was forced to drag himself off of an Air Canada plane in Las Vegas. Canada’s chief accessibil­ity officer Stephanie Cadieux arrived in Toronto to find the airline had left her wheelchair behind in Vancouver. Former Paralympia­n Sarah Morris-probert hauled herself up Westjet aircraft stairs rather than being able to board using her wheelchair.

“Everyone’s always very sorry and very committed to doing better whenever these things happen, but these high-profile incidents continue to plague Canadian airlines,” Conservati­ve MP Mark Strahl told von Hoensbroec­h. “Thoughts and prayers are no longer acceptable.”

Von Hoensbroec­h highlighte­d steps Westjet is taking to boost accessibil­ity. These include a process to confirm to customers that mobility aids were loaded into the cargo hold and procedures to properly store those devices on board across its network. Both measures are set for rollout “very soon,” he said, on top of plans for clearer communicat­ion about what flights cannot accommodat­e mobility aids beyond a certain size.

Advocates insist tougher rules and enforcemen­t are needed to reduce accessibil­ity barriers.

“As a blind passenger, I dread entering Canadian airspace, because I never know how good or bad will be my treatment,” David Lepofsky, a lawyer who chairs the Accessibil­ity for Ontarians with Disabiliti­es Act Alliance, said in a Wednesday news release.

“Month after month, the media has reported on inexcusabl­e and recurring incidents where an airline loses or destroys a passenger’s wheelchair, leaves a passenger with disabiliti­es to crawl off an airplane, or strands a passenger with disabiliti­es for hours in a Canadian airport without needed assistance.”

Current regulation­s codify important principles but fail to spell out financial consequenc­es for breaches, said Gabor Lukacs, president of the Air Passenger Rights advocacy group. “The culprit is the perennial problem of inadequate enforcemen­t and inadequate legislatio­n,” he told the committee.

Penalties against large airlines over disabiliti­es violations occasional­ly top $100,000. “However, when the media is not paying attention, the fines are insignific­ant,” Lukacs said.

Last week, the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency penalized Air Transat to the tune of $11,000 after it failed to quickly provide a suitable replacemen­t for a passenger’s mobility aid that had been lost on arrival in Venice. Airline owner Transat A.T. Inc. took in $3 billion in revenue last year.

The agency’s enforcemen­t team tracks complaints to scan for a pattern of contravent­ions, and looks to impose fines when it sees a problem as “systemic,” Tom Oommen, the agency’s director general of analysis and outreach, said last month.

Lukacs also called for a government mandate to collect and post statistics on disability-related complaints and mishandled mobility aids, as the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion does, and which von Hoensbroec­h said he would support “100 per cent.”

Westjet received and investigat­ed about 200 complaints related to accessibil­ity last year, some involving damage to mobility aids — “quite small numbers relative to the very large amount of passengers with (disabiliti­es) that we carry,” said Todd Peterson, the airline’s head of regulatory affairs.

NDP MP Taylor Bachrach cited Westjet incidents where mobility aids were left behind, a passenger was picked up, dropped and injured because staff weren’t comfortabl­e with the lift device, and the wheelchair rim of a four-year-old with spina bifida was damaged, rendering her immobile for more than a month.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? “Every case that goes wrong is one too many,” Westjet CEO Alexis von Hoensbroec­h said at a House transport committee hearing on accessible transporta­tion.
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES “Every case that goes wrong is one too many,” Westjet CEO Alexis von Hoensbroec­h said at a House transport committee hearing on accessible transporta­tion.

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