Times Colonist

Advocates, Air Canada clash on accessible travel

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

Advocates and Air Canada’s CEO served up opposing views of on-board accessibil­ity for passengers on Tuesday, though both sides agree that consistenc­y remains a problem.

Michael Rousseau, who heads Canada’s largest airline, told a House of Commons transport committee an overwhelmi­ng majority of the 1.3 million passengers who requested special assistance last year had a positive experience. About 19,500 — or 0.15 per cent — filed complaints.

“This is not to minimize the number of incidents nor the serious impacts the disruption­s have on the individual­s involved. But it is important context that indicates, first, we do a good job and, second, more importantl­y, we need and we will continue to get better,” Rousseau said.

“We have concluded the chief issue was inconsiste­ncy,” he added, citing training as the remedy.

Complaint statistics fail to reflect the travel experience of many people living with disabiliti­es, who sometimes wait unassisted for hours or have to instruct employees on how to guide them, said disability rights advocate David Lepofsky.

“I personally have spent four hours parked at a gate waiting for a flight,” said Heather Walkus, who heads the Council of Canadians with Disabiliti­es.

“No one’s come to see me. There’s no way to contact anyone. I’m having to go to the washroom. I can’t get something to eat,” she said.

“We’re moved like luggage from one end to the other.”

Rousseau acknowledg­ed that the issues are “probably underrepor­ted.”

Lepofsky pushed back.

“To be able to say you’re doing a good job and these are the numbers is to be shockingly out of touch with our experience,” he told the committee.

“We heard from Air Canada today that … the problems are few or infrequent and that really all they need is more education or training for their staff. Every single one of those statements is wrong,” claimed Lepofsky, who heads the Accessibil­ity for Ontarians with Disabiliti­es Act Alliance.

“As a blind person, I dread entering Canadian airspace.”

Lepofsky called for an easily reachable hotline for travellers with disabiliti­es at each airline, regulator-deployed “secret shoppers” who pose as passengers to assess customer service practices and curb-to-gate assistance by a single employee — rather than being “passed like a baton” by up to five workers.

Canada needs stricter rules and tougher enforcemen­t to ensure consistenc­y and accountabi­lity, the advocates said.

Multiple incidents surfaced at Canadian airlines over the past year, prompting the committee hearings.

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.

Under a three-year plan, Air Canada has pledged to roll out measures that range from establishi­ng a customer accessibil­ity director — now in place — to requiring annual training for its 10,000 front-line staff.

Earlier this year, the carrier formed an advisory committee made up of customers with disabiliti­es and launched the “sunflower program” where a lanyard worn by travellers indicates to staff they may need assistance — the first airline in North America to do so.

It also now allows customers to track their checked mobility aids in real time with an app.

Rousseau said he was open to more transparen­t rules around reporting complaints, though he said that other aviation players should be included and any measures should be “non-punitive.”

In the United States, all complaints submitted to airlines are handed over to the federal regulator. “In Canada, we essentiall­y have to take your word for it,” said NDP transport critic Taylor Bachrach.

Rousseau said Air Canada is speaking with plane-making giants Boeing Co. and Airbus SE about redesigns to ease accessibil­ity to washrooms, particular­ly on narrow-body planes.

“Washrooms are not designed for use by anybody who is not in perfect physical condition, and they are certainly not wheelchair-accessible,” said Liberal lawmaker Annie Koutrakis.

On Monday, the government announced a summit on air accessibil­ity slated for May 9. But Lepofsky seemed to concur with Conservati­ve committee member Dan Muys, who questioned the point of the gathering.

“A summit is a photo op,” Lepofsky said.

Advocates also called for stronger deterrence actions by the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An Air Canada jet is moved on the tarmac at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport.
ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS An Air Canada jet is moved on the tarmac at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport.

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