Toronto Star

Air Canada reprimande­d by transport watchdog

All deaf-blind passengers forced to travel with attendant under airline’s disability policy

- GEORDON OMAND THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER— Canada’s transporta­tion watchdog has chided Air Canada for what it calls a discrimina­tory policy prohibitin­g people with certain disabiliti­es from flying alone.

The Canadian Transporta­tion Agency ordered the airline to officially change its guidelines requiring people who are blind and deaf to travel with an attendant.

The ruling came after a complaint filed by Carrie Moffatt, who learned of the policy when she booked a flight from Vancouver to Victoria in September 2013.

Moffatt is legally blind and deaf but can read text and communicat­e orally by phone. She complained to the transporta­tion agency after Air Canada refused to change its rules.

“When we first encountere­d this, it seemed like it was just something that they’d overlooked, that somebody had just put in place years and years ago and had just forgotten about,” said Amita Vulimiri, a lawyer with Community Legal Assistance Society who provided Moffatt with legal advice.

“But when we did point it out to them, we had to litigate for pretty much a year before they agreed to change their policy.”

Deaf-blind people are the only group with a disability that Air Canada defines as exclusivel­y non-self-reliant, meaning they are required to have an attendant.

“A quadripleg­ic would not have been subject to this type of scrutiny by Air Canada,” Vulimiri said. “It’s only deafblind persons.”

Instead of being able to fly alone, Mof- fatt would have had the responsibi­lity of finding her own attendant to accompany her, her lawyer said.

On flights within Canada, the company provides an extra seat for free, but that is not the case for internatio­nal flights, Vulimiri said.

In its April interim decision, the transporta­tion agency found that deaf-blind people have the right to travel independen­tly and to decide for themselves whether they are capable of doing so.

The airline drafted a new policy after the agency ruled earlier this year in Moffatt’s favour and gave Air Canada until Dec. 15 to formalize its policies and procedures and educate employees.

“Air Canada’s policy was based on the unfortunat­ely common and paternalis­tic assumption that people who are deafblind are incapable of being independen­t,” Moffatt said in a statement.

“I’m dismayed that Air Canada had to be ordered to remove this arbitrary and unnecessar­y barrier against people with dual-sensory impairment­s.”

Air Canada has submitted an amended version of its disability policy to the transporta­tion agency but the airline has yet to update the guidelines posted on its website.

Vulimiri said that, to her knowledge, Air Canada was the only airline in North America to have such a policy. No one from Air Canada could be reached for comment.

Vulimiri said the airline eventually allowed Moffatt to travel independen­tly on a September flight, in violation of its policy and only after they classified her as blind but not deaf.

Air Canada removed a note from her file saying she had a hearing loss, meaning she was then unable to inform the flight crew of her impairment — informatio­n the crew needed, Vulimiri said.

 ?? MIKE CASSESE/REUTERS ?? Deaf-blind people are the only group Air Canada defines as exclusivel­y non-self-reliant, a distinctio­n that prohibits them from flying alone.
MIKE CASSESE/REUTERS Deaf-blind people are the only group Air Canada defines as exclusivel­y non-self-reliant, a distinctio­n that prohibits them from flying alone.

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