Dozens of travellers with disabilities report injuries, damaged wheelchairs while flying
CBC
WARNING: This story contains an image of an injury that some may find distressing.
In April, Phil and Lisa Gilliard set out from their home in Prince George, B.C., to Vancouver, where Phil was receiving an award with the ALS Society of British Columbia.
Phil, 74, has primary lateral sclerosis, a rare disease that affects fewer than 50 people in B.C. As a result he is non-verbal, and uses a wheelchair to get around.
The Gilliards enjoyed the ceremony and the support from the ALS community. But the trip took a turn on their return flight home.
Lisa said WestJet crew didn't know how to operate the eagle lift Phil needed to get into his seat, and almost dropped him as they tried to transfer him. They eventually moved him out of the airplane and then re-boarded him using a different piece of equipment.
Back home in Prince George, as Lisa helped Phil change his clothes, she noticed a bloody wound on his elbow surrounded by purple bruises. Because Phil is non-verbal, he hadn't been able to communicate he'd been hurt.
"I took off his coat, his long-sleeve shirt, and it was all bashed. I can't believe they took several layers of skin off," said Lisa.
"I was like, come on, nobody is trained? I know how to run a portable lift. I don't understand, for an international airport, that they don't have people that are trained for that."
The Gilliards filed a complaint with WestJet and wrote to the CEO of Vancouver International Airport, but received no response. WestJet said because the couple did not save their boarding confirmation number, they could not provide more information about the case.
Their story is one of dozens received by CBC News from wheelchair users who say they've been mistreated by airlines, some dating back to the late '80s. Some passengers shared stories of mobility devices damaged or forgotten in transit. Others like Phil described injuries sustained during transfers.
One man said he looked out the plane window and saw his mobility aid worth $21,000 flipped upside down on the tarmac.
Another said upon landing in Barbados on an Air Canada flight, his wife had to be lifted by other passengers into a bus on the tarmac, then had to crawl off the bus once they arrived at the terminal. In response, Air Canada offered the couple 100,000 Aeroplan points.
A common refrain CBC News heard in those experiences: a need for better training, and a change in attitude toward people with disabilities and the mobility equipment they need.
Last week, Air Canada was summoned to Ottawa by the transport minister after a man with spastic cerebral palsy was forced to drag himself off an Air Canada flight in Las Vegas. The incident garnered international attention and triggered an investigation by the Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA).