The Mid-Atlantic Regional Group
Blinded Veterans Association
Other News
May 8, 2008
For all the Blinded Veterans
Association contacts and especially for those who plan on traveling this summer
to the BVA national convention in
This might be of interest to anyone trying to deal with the airlines.
Office of Public Affairs
www.dot.gov/affairs/briefing.htm
News
DOT 67-08
Contact: Bill Mosley
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Tel: (202) 366-4570
DOT Increases Protections for Air Travelers with Disabilities
People with disabilities will have additional protections against discrimination when they travel by air, as the result of a new rule issued today by the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) that strengthens the existing regulation implementing the Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) and extends it to foreign airlines.
The new rule will apply to
foreign air carriers operating a flight that begins or ends in the
“This revised rule expands the protections people with disabilities will enjoy while traveling by air,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E. Peters said.
The new rule will also make it easier for passengers to use medical oxygen during flights by requiring airlines to allow the use in the passenger cabin of portable oxygen concentrators that meet applicable safety, security and hazardous materials requirements for safe use aboard aircraft. The Department will seek further comment in a supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking (SNPRM) about whether airlines should be required to provide medical oxygen to passengers upon request. The SNPRM will also address subjects such as accessibility of airline web sites, automated ticketing kiosks, and in flight entertainment systems.
The new rule will also provide greater accommodations for passengers with hearing impairments. It will require airlines to include easy-to-read captions for the hearing-impaired in its safety and informational videos. Airlines also must promptly provide the same information to hearing- and vision-impaired passengers that it provides to other passengers in airport terminals or on the aircraft – such as information on boarding, flight delays, schedule changes, weather conditions at the flight’s destination, connecting gate assignments, checking and claiming of baggage, and emergencies. The rule does not specify how carriers should make this information available to passengers who are deaf or hard of hearing.
The ACAA, enacted by Congress in 1986, prohibits airlines from discriminating against disabled passengers. The Department issued its first ACAA regulations in 1990 and has amended the rules several times since then.
The new rule will be effective in one year to give carriers enough time to begin implementing its provisions. The text of the final rule is available on the Internet at www.regulations.gov , docket number DOT-OST-2004-19482.
Tom Zampieri
Director Government Relations
Blinded Veterans Association
End of Document