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Travel Discussion
Reply to "Abusing wheelchair access in airports"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I have seen many able bodied older adults requesting and using wheelchairs to get gates from check-in. Mostly they seem to use this as a way to get through security and also not having to read or follow directions. I think the airports and airlines should start charging a fee to use this unless they are really in need due to actual physical need. What do you guys think?[/quote] Regardless of whether it’s a genuine physical need or abusing the system, I don’t really understand why there isn’t an automatic cost for requiring these additional services. How is it any different from having to pay extra for a minor traveling solo or a larger person having to pay more for an extra seat?[/quote] Because it is illegal under the ADA. You can't pass on the costs of accessibility to disabled people. Come on now. [/quote] The accessibility clause requires that the airplanes/airports be able reasonably accommodate people requiring access via wheelchairs, etc but [b]not that they pay for the services required for someone to push said wheelchair.[/b][/quote] +1 And the same way general populations are tired of subsidizing unhealthy lifestyles in insurance pools and hospital costs, it's going to catch up with us. Everything is always extremes until something snaps. This is why we can't have nice things. There are people who suck down sodas, eat garbage, don't excercise and end up wheelchair bound and everyone else pays for them. (I know that's not the story, but that's how simplified it is to some)[/quote] I think we can't have nice things because people lack compassion.[/quote] No. It’s too much compassion.[/quote] The nice thing would be a society where people actually care enough about access for people with disabilities to where some minor financial or logistical inefficiency isn't being whined about, a society where everyone has value and people aren't simply "me, me, me" all the time.[/quote]
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