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Fact
Sheet
Steps
Taken to Ensure New Security Requirements Preserve
and Respect the Civil Rights of People with Disabilities
This message
was e-mailed to large airlines, aviation associations, and the National
Council on Disability. It concerns the aftermath of the attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001.
The Air Carrier
Access Act (ACAA) and the Department of Transportation’s implementing rules
prohibit discriminatory treatment of persons
with disabilities in air transportation. Since the terrorist
hijackings and tragic events of September 11, the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) has issued directives to strengthen security
measures at airline checkpoints and passenger
screening locations. In securing our national air transportation
system, where much of FAA’s efforts have been directed
to date, steps were also taken to ensure that the new security procedures
preserve and respect the civil rights of passengers
with disabilities. This Fact Sheet provides information about the
accessibility requirements in air travel in light of strengthened
security measures by providing a few examples of the types of accommodations
and services that must be provided to passengers
with disabilities. The examples listed below are not all-inclusive
and are simply meant to provide answers to
frequently asked questions since September 11 concerning the air travel
of people with disabilities.
Check-in
-Air carriers
must provide meet-and-assist service (e.g., assistance to gate or aircraft)
at drop-off points. The lack of curbside
check-in, for certain airlines at some airports, has not changed the requirement
for meet-and-assist service at drop-off points.
Screener
checkpoints
-Individuals
assisting passengers with disabilities are allowed beyond the screener
checkpoints. These individuals may be
required to present themselves at the airlines’ check-in desk and receive
a “pass” allowing them to go through the screener
checkpoint without a ticket.
-Ticketed passengers
with their own oxygen for use on the ground are allowed beyond the screener
checkpoints with their oxygen canisters once
the canisters have been thoroughly inspected. If there is a request
for oxygen at the gate for a qualified passenger
with a disability, commercial oxygen providers are allowed beyond the screener
checkpoints with
oxygen canisters
once the canisters have been thoroughly inspected. Commercial oxygen
providers may be required to present themselves
at the airlines’ check-in desk and receive a “pass” allowing them to go
through the screener checkpoint without a
ticket.
-The limit
of one carry-on bag and one personal bag (e.g., purse or briefcase)
for each traveler does not apply to medical
supplies and/or assistive devices. Passengers with disabilities generally
may carry medical equipment, medications,
and assistive devices on board the aircraft.
-All persons
allowed beyond the screener checkpoints may be searched. This will
usually be done through the use of a hand-held
metal detector, whenever possible. Passengers may also be patted
down during security screenings, and this is
even more likely if the passenger uses a wheelchair and is unable to stand
up. Private screenings remain an option for persons
in wheelchairs.
-Service animals,
once inspected to ensure prohibited items are not concealed, are permitted
on board an aircraft. Any backpack or
sidepack that is carried on the animal will be manually inspected or put
through the X-ray machines. The service
animal’s halter may also be removed for inspection.
-Assistive
devices such as walking canes, once inspected to ensure prohibited items
are not concealed, are permitted on board an aircraft. Assistive
devices such as augmentative communication devices and Braille ‘N Speaks
will go through the same sort of security
screening process as used for personal computers.
Syringes are
permitted on board an aircraft once it is determined that the person has
a documented medical need for the syringe.
Personal wheelchairs
and battery-powered scooters may still be used to reach departure gates
after they are inspected to ensure that they
do not present a security risk. Any backpack or sidepack that is
carried on the wheelchair will be manually
inspected or put through the X-ray machines.
-Personal wheelchairs
will still be allowed to be stowed on board an aircraft.
-Air carriers
must ensure that qualified individuals with a disability, including those
with vision or hearing impairments, have timely
access to information, such as new security measures, the carriers provide
to other passengers. For example, on
flights to Reagan Washington National Airport, persons are verbally warned
to use the restrooms more
than half an
hour before arrival since after that point in time passengers are required
to remain in their seats. Alternative formats
are necessary to ensure that all passengers, especially deaf persons, understand
new security measures such as the one at Reagan
Washington National.
We hope this
information is helpful to you. Members of the public who feel
they have been the subject of discriminatory actions
or treatment by air carriers may file a complaint by sending an email,
a letter, or a completed complaint form to the Aviation
Consumer Protection Division (ACPD). ACPD’s e-mail address is airconsumer@ost.dot.gov
and its mailing address is: Aviation
Consumer Protection Division, U.S. Department of Transportation, Room 4107,
C-75, Washington, DC 20590.
Complaint forms
that consumers may download and/or print are available at http://www.dot.gov/airconsumer/problems.htm.
Issued on 10/29/01
by the Office of the Assistant General Counsel for Aviation Enforcement
and Proceedings and its Aviation Consumer Protection Division.
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