PAX ACCESS

Air Canada Adopts New Polices for Passengers with Disabilities

Passengers with disabilities will soon find significant improvements when they fly with the country's largest airline.

Air Canada today apologized for past problems suffered by passengers with disabilities and announced a series of measures to "reduce barriers and make travel simpler, more comfortable and consistently reliable for customers with disabilities."

The actions being taken will accelerate Air Canada's Accessibility Plan 2023-26, a three-year strategy released in June, and are intended to reduce or eliminate major sources of dissatisfaction and trip disruption for customers with disabilities.

Among the changes are priority boarding, seating near the front of their section, better communications, more staff training, storage of mobility aids in the cabin when possible, and more.

"Air Canada recognizes the challenges customers with disabilities encounter when they fly and accepts its responsibility to provide convenient and consistent service so that flying with us becomes easier. Sometimes we do not meet this commitment, for which we offer a sincere apology. As our customers with disabilities tell us, the most important thing is that we continuously improve in the future," said Michael Rousseau, President and Chief Executive Officer of Air Canada.

"We are listening to them and today we are committing to do better and demonstrating that commitment with concrete actions,"

"In June, we released our three-year accessibility plan. The measures we are announcing today accelerate key components in that plan," said Craig Landry, Executive Vice President and Chief Operations Officer at Air Canada. "This includes improving boarding and seating, better customer communications, new processes to prevent delays or damage to mobility devices, more training and an investment in equipment such as lifts.

"We also intend to implement further measures as we strive to make Air Canada accessible for people managing disabilities."

"Air Canada is acting to make travel easier and more comfortable for customers with disabilities. This will include working with the airline's regional partners to ensure consistency."

The following measures, which are fully in line with the airline's new, three-year Accessibility Plan, are being implemented now to have effect and produce benefits more immediately, officials said. The initiatives include:

IMMEDIATE MEASURES

BOARDING

Customers at the gate who request lift assistance will be consistently boarded first before all other customers and proactively seated at the front of the cabin they booked. Air Canada is investing significantly in new equipment at Canadian airports, such as lifts, to ensure that we can meet the expectations of our customers.

STORAGE OF MOBILITY AIDS

Mobility aids will be stored in the aircraft cabin when possible. When mobility aids are stored in the cargo hold, new systems are being put in place to track them in transit, including a process to confirm mobility aids are properly loaded before departure. Customers travelling within Canada will be able to track the journey of their mobility aid using the Air Canada app. In addition, the airline is adopting new processes to load mobility aids in the aircraft holds to ensure our customers' mobility aids arrive safely.

TRAINING

Enhanced training will be supplied to improve all aspects of employee interactions with customers with disabilities, including understanding customer experiences in air travel. Air Canada's approximately 10,000 airport employees will receive this training as part of a new annual, recurrent training program. This will consist of both soft skill and equipment training, such as lifting techniques. Customers with disabilities will be invited to make presentations at employee workshops and provide advice on further process developments.

RESPONSIBILITY

Air Canada has created the new senior position of Director, Customer Accessibility. She will lead a team to manage implementation of the company's accessibility plan as well as provide a resource and common reference point for responsive management of disability issues.

Evolving Expectations

"Due to advances in technology and customer needs, there has been a welcome and continual increase in travel demand from people with disabilities," airline officials said. "Along with this, societal expectations are also evolving. Companies must constantly review and improve their accessibility capabilities to keep them in line with current advancements. Air Canada embraces this."

In June, the airline finalized a three-year plan to increase accessibility for customers and employees called Air Canada's Accessibility Plan 2023-26. It also fully supports the Government of Canada's Accessible Canada Act and its aim to realize a barrier-free Canada by 2040.


Jim Byers

Contributor

Jim Byers is a freelance travel writer based in Toronto. He was formerly travel editor at the Toronto Star and now writes for a variety of publications in Canada and around the world. He's also a regular guest on CBC, CTV News, Global News and other television and radio networks.

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