Houston Chronicle Sunday

Airlines pushed to report on lost, damaged wheelchair­s

Lawmaker, double amputee and war veteran Tammy Duckworth says requiremen­t will inform passengers which airlines are transport-friendly

- By Hugo Martin

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth was serving in Iraq when the Black Hawk helicopter she was co-piloting was shot down in 2004. She sustained massive injuries in the crash, forcing doctors to amputate both legs.

Since then, Duckworth, D-Ill., has been peeved that airlines have broken two of her wheelchair­s and lost numerous parts of other wheelchair­s.

As a lawmaker, Duckworth took action. A rule she added to a recently adopted FAA funding bill requires airlines to begin reporting to the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion the number of wheelchair­s and mobility scooters that airlines damage or lose each month.

Under previous rules, airlines were required to file monthly reports on the number and rate of flight delays, passengers bumped off of overbooked flights and luggage damaged or lost, among other data, but carriers have not been required to report data on wheelchair­s and scooters.

The new rule, Duckworth said, will make it easier for passengers to know before booking a flight which airlines have a bad or good record of transporti­ng wheelchair­s and scooters.

“Travelers should be able to find out if certain airlines have high rates of breaking wheelchair­s and other equipment that people depend on, just like we can find out if certain airlines have high rates of flight delays or cancellati­ons,” she said in a statement. The Transporta­tion Department began enforcing the rule on Monday.

In addition, Duckworth's legislatio­n forces carriers to report the total number of bags checked, making it easier to calculate a rate of lost bags from the data that airlines already report.

A representa­tive for Airlines for America, the trade group for the nation's carriers, said the group has been working with advocates for disabled travelers and wheelchair manufactur­ers “to address the most efficient and safe handling and storage guidelines to reduce the number of wheelchair­s damaged in air travel.”

 ?? Cliff Owen / Associated Press File photo ?? Tammy Duckworth says airlines have broken two of her wheelchair­s and lost numerous parts of others.
Cliff Owen / Associated Press File photo Tammy Duckworth says airlines have broken two of her wheelchair­s and lost numerous parts of others.

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