FrankCanada97
Roughly the size of a baaaaaarge
No, this is not another United Airlines incident.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/06/28/national/vanilla-air-makes-wheelchair-user-pull-stairs-airplane/#.WVRwulGQyUk
Accessibility is an issue that often goes unnoticed. Obviously, most international airports use jet bridges, but there are a lot of smaller airports that use air stairs for boarding.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/06/28/national/vanilla-air-makes-wheelchair-user-pull-stairs-airplane/#.WVRwulGQyUk
A subsidiary of All Nippon Airways Co. has apologized to a man paralyzed below the waist after it forced him to climb stairs on his own using only his arms to board a plane at Amami Airport in Kagoshima Prefecture.
The flights operator, Vanilla Air Inc., a low-cost carrier wholly owned by ANA Holdings Inc., issued the apology to Hideto Kijima, 44, and have since installed equipment to help disabled passengers board its aircraft, according to the airline and Kijima.
On arrival at Amami, Vanilla Air allowed three companions to carry Kijima in his wheelchair down to the tarmac.
However, on his way back to Osaka on June 5, the airline told Kijima he could not ask for similar help when boarding the plane, saying it was against the companys rules for people to carry passengers in wheelchairs up the boarding ramp.
The decision left Kijima with no other choice than to pull himself up the steps using his arms.
A Vanilla Air spokesman told The Japan Times that the company could not have passengers use the staircase while in a wheelchair due to safety concerns unless it was notified five days in advance. The airline installed a stretcher at the airport on June 14 to help disabled passengers.
Kijima said he was surprised to be prohibited from boarding a flight using his wheelchair, and that he hoped his case would become an example of a solution to be taken when similar forms of discrimination take place.
In Japan, the Law on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities finally took effect in April last year, Kijima said. The law has encouraged authorities and airlines to address similar problems without incident.
Accessibility is an issue that often goes unnoticed. Obviously, most international airports use jet bridges, but there are a lot of smaller airports that use air stairs for boarding.