Passenger: Airline Said I'm 'too Disabled' To Fly Alone
#1
Posted 16 October 2010 - 01:20 AM
(CNN) -- Seasoned business traveler Johnnie Tuitel, a motivational speaker who estimates he's flown a half a million miles, experienced a personal air travel first last month.
A US Airways employee told him he was "too disabled to fly" alone, Tuitel said.
Tuitel, who has cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair, had already settled into his seat when the airline attendant who helped him onto the plane escorted him off and delivered this news.
"Their argument was if something were to happen, I can't help myself or somebody else, which is an assumption first of all. Second of all, the people that made the decision are not medical doctors," said Tuitel, 47, of East Grand Rapids, Michigan.
"They basically told me I was too disabled to fly and I had to fly with a companion and I had to purchase that companion's ticket," he told HLN's "Prime News."
US Airways said for safety reasons, the airline's official policy requires passengers with severe mobility impairments to travel with someone who would be able to help them evacuate the aircraft.
US Airways spokeswoman Michelle Mohr said Tuitel was not deemed unfit to fly alone just because he uses a wheelchair.
"He did not appear to have the ability to assist himself in evacuating in the event of an emergency. He appeared to have a lot of difficulty moving," Mohr said.
The head of the American Association of People with Disabilities called the incident "outrageous."
"In some ways, I'm not surprised that it happened because there are still a lot of folks that assume that if you have a significant disability that you shouldn't be traveling by yourself," said Andrew Imparato, the association's president and CEO.
Rich Donovan, who is on the board of trustees of United Cerebral Palsy and also has the disease, doesn't see this incident as one of negligence or an intent to discriminate on the part of US Airways. He attributes Tuitel's experience to a lack of training and a lack of clarity about policies and how they're applied to disabled travelers.
"There's a general lack of understanding of disability amongst the entire travel industry, and I think that's simply because they look at it as a compliance issue, rather than a customer service issue," said Donovan, who is the chief investment officer of IPS Capital.
The September 23 incident on a flight from West Palm Beach, Florida, to Kansas City, Missouri, is the only time Tuitel has been removed from a flight in his 20-year career, he said.
Tuitel initially told CNN he planned to pursue legal action. Later, he told "Prime News" that he would not sue.
The Air Carrier Access Act prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability. It is unclear whether US Airways' actions violated the act's provisions.
But Tuitel said he wants to make sure this doesn't happen to other disabled passengers.
"I don't want a little boy with a disability not have the opportunity to go somewhere. I don't want a young girl with a disability going out for her first job interview by herself to be told she can't fly in an airplane," he said.
Tuitel said that after he was escorted off the flight, he booked a seat on Delta Air Lines and had no problems traveling alone on that flight.
US Airways contacted him several weeks after the incident, offering to reimburse him for the flight, Tuitel said. He declined the offer. US Airways said it spoke with Tuitel on Friday about collaborating with the airline as it works to improve service for disabled passengers. Tuitel said the conversation was "very productive."
Donovan hopes this incident will be a learning experience for airlines and make customer service better.
"I think some dialogue and some hand-wringing and some getting down into the weeds here is what needs to happen so that this stuff doesn't occur again," he said.
#2
Posted 16 October 2010 - 01:45 AM
mellowgator
#4
Posted 16 October 2010 - 03:18 AM
#6
Posted 16 October 2010 - 07:17 AM
#8
Posted 16 October 2010 - 11:31 AM
#9
Posted 16 October 2010 - 11:41 AM
Kippling, on 16 October 2010 - 11:31 AM, said:
I'd like to see an endless line of wheelchair users at their check-in desks.
Carpe Diem
#10
Posted 16 October 2010 - 03:47 PM
Edited by airart1, 16 October 2010 - 03:47 PM.
#11
Posted 16 October 2010 - 06:28 PM
AND you can sellect anyone you choose,,, including any other passenger on that flight,,, and they fly FREE.
Seems the only problem here was that NOBODY had read the rules. I'm assuming that this was a domestic flight or a domestic airline. These rules I have stated are only inforcable in the US or if the flight originates here.
If you are in the US,,,, anytime you feel you might have a problem,,,, demand to speak to the CRO that's the complaint resolution officer. ALL US airports MUST have one either on site or available by phone, 24/7.
These are the federal rules,,, if you know them,, you won't have these problems. At least if you fly in the US, that is. Outside you depend on the kindness of others,,, just like Scarlette O'Hara.
ed
#14
Posted 17 October 2010 - 10:28 AM
#15
Posted 17 October 2010 - 01:42 PM
greybeard, on 16 October 2010 - 11:41 AM, said:
Kippling, on 16 October 2010 - 11:31 AM, said:
I'd like to see an endless line of wheelchair users at their check-in desks.
I see your argument. Maybe I'm being selfish. It's just I'd much rather fly with a carrier, Virgin Atlantic for example, that caters well for SCI people.
#16
Posted 18 October 2010 - 04:41 PM
We need to go higher than the airlines!
Does anyone know of any authorities??? that can say to ALL airlines this has to stop!
You can't be worried about whether connecting airlines are not going to allow you to board somewhere else across the world.
#17
Posted 18 October 2010 - 07:46 PM
http://eur-lex.europ...6en00010009.pdf
Never grow old, never die young.
#18
Posted 18 October 2010 - 09:08 PM
Tinbasher, on 18 October 2010 - 07:46 PM, said:
http://eur-lex.europ...6en00010009.pdf
(2) Disabled persons and persons with reduced mobility should
therefore be accepted for carriage and not refused transport
on the grounds of their disability or lack of mobility, except
for reasons which are justified on the grounds of safety
END QUOTE
There's their get-out clause. It was the one used against the OP.
We all know it's bollocks, but without the "grounds of safety" being defined in the legislation, airlines will continue to be free to put their own interpretation on the phrase.
Making a huge stink in the press whenever this happens will be a far more effective way of countering this discrimination, than poorly drafted legislation.
Carpe Diem
#20
Posted 19 October 2010 - 08:24 AM
It has been standard practice for years now with airlines such as KLM, Air France, Air New Zealand, Qantas
and a couple of others that they will not fly unaccompanied disabled passengers. I know Paralympic athletes
who have been refused flights by these airlines because they were travelling alone. Why the fuss now over
some two bit US airline?
#22
Posted 19 October 2010 - 07:35 PM
Quote
© If the carrier determines that a person meeting the criteria of paragraph ((2), ((3) or ((4) of this section must travel with an attendant, contrary to the individual's self-assessment that he or she is capable of traveling independently, the carrier shall not charge for the transportation of the attendant
There are anumber of other sections that apply directly to this situation,, but my cut and paste ability is limited. If interested,, you can google "DOT part 382",,, that will give you the whole thing. The point is that it's up to the passenger. If he doesn't think he needs an attendant, and the airline does,, the airline pays. AND the passenger decides who the attendant is,, not the airline. He can ask the guy sitting beside or behind him and if they agree,, they fly free.
If, for some reason, they manage to keep the guy off the flight, they have to send him a letter explaining exactly why,, not just "for safety",, but exactly why he was unsafe. Lawsuit city.
As in most things,, it pays to know the rules.
ed
Edited by edlee, 19 October 2010 - 07:36 PM.
#23
Posted 19 October 2010 - 08:48 PM
Tinbasher, on 18 October 2010 - 09:11 PM, said:
There are reasons for it and as a pilot myself for the last 30 years......you really don't want to take away the captain/pilot's final authority about the safety of a flight....this situation aside.
#24
Posted 19 October 2010 - 09:48 PM
JimG, on 19 October 2010 - 08:48 PM, said:
Tinbasher, on 18 October 2010 - 09:11 PM, said:
There are reasons for it and as a pilot myself for the last 30 years......you really don't want to take away the captain/pilot's final authority about the safety of a flight....this situation aside.
I don't think this situation (having a disabled passenger on board) brings into question the safety of the "flight", but is more the airline speaking to the safety of the "disbled" passenger. More than likely if youre in a plane crash youre either going to die or not, handicapped or ab. The airlines arent cocerned about safety per se, but moreso their pocketbooks. Frivlous lawsuits like the Chipotle one force them to. Id be happy to sign a waiver saying no one would sue on my bealf if I crash and burn, problem solved in my mind.
#25
Posted 20 October 2010 - 08:56 PM
#26
Posted 14 October 2011 - 06:47 PM
The consumer council pressurized Easyjet for a year on my behalf (there were other complaints of a similar nature against Easyjet)and we forced them to wise up in the end.
If anyone finds their service in the future difficult, please post here.
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