‘Passed like a baton’: Advocates, Air Canada CEO clash on accessible travel
OTTAWA — Advocates and Air Canada’s CEO are serving up opposing views of accessibility in the country’s aviation system.
Michael Rousseau, who heads Canada’s largest airline, told a House of Commons transport committee today that an overwhelming majority of the 1.3 million passengers who requested special assistance last year had a positive experience.
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.
But disability rights advocate David Lepofsky says the complaint statistics fail to reflect the experience of many people living with disabilities, who sometimes wait unassisted for hours or have to instruct employees on how to guide them.