Pay for damaged wheelchairs, leading Paralympian tells airlines

15 Jun 2016 02:31 PM

British air carriers should cover the full cost of damage they cause to wheelchairs and mobility devices, according to Chris Holmes, Disability Commissioner of the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

One of Britain’s most successful Paralympic athletes and former Director of Paralympic Integration for London 2012 has criticised British Airways and London City airport for its treatment of disabled customers.

Lord Holmes spoke out after the electric wheelchair of Athena Stevens, a playwright and actor with cerebral palsy, was irreparably damaged on a flight from London to Glasgow last October. Although the wheelchair was worth over £25,000, no appropriate offer of compensation has been made and, before Stevens began legal action, she had received only £500 from London City Airport to cover taxi costs.

As British Airways prepares to take Team GB to the Rio Paralympic Games in September, questions have also been raised as to whether the airline would also refuse to replace the equipment of Paralympic athletes competing in Rio, in the event that something was damaged.

Lord Holmes said:

“Disabled people are often deterred from flying for fear of loss, damage or destruction of their mobility equipment. Athena’s story is a case in point. She has been left without a replacement chair for eight months. We’re not talking about a suitcase or a set of golf clubs - this is a person's mobility and independence.

“Considering that BA is a main sponsor of Team GB, I think it’s fair to ask whether this practice would equally apply to competing athletes, and if so, whether the Paralympic team been made aware that British Airways will not cover the full cost if their equipment is damaged? If this isn’t the case, it would be rank hypocrisy to fully compensate some, while others are left to foot the bill.”

Under the Montreal Convention, which sets rules for the carriage of air passengers, baggage and cargo, wheelchairs and assistive devices are treated as baggage, and compensation for damaged items is calculated on the basis of the weight rather than value.  According to the Civil Aviation Authority, the amount a disabled person can expect by way of compensation for damaged mobility equipment “may be limited to around £1,300.”

Lord Holmes believes air carriers are hiding behind an international convention to avoid paying for damaged mobility equipment vital for disabled people to live their lives independently.

“This unfair policy is trapping disabled people in a cycle of disadvantage, and British air carriers have the moral responsibility to stop applying it to disabled customers’ mobility equipment, as it's clearly unfit for purpose.”

The use of the Convention to limit liability for wheelchairs and mobility equipment has come under increased scrutiny. The European Commission “encourages airlines to voluntarily waive their limited liability to bring the amount of compensation closer to the actual value of the mobility equipment.”

This approach has already been implemented by the largest airlines in Germany and Canada - Lufthansa and Air Canada. Both airlines have already moved to waive the provisions of the Montreal Convention in the event of damage to a wheelchair or mobility aid. In the United States, the Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) states that for domestic flights, “the criterion for calculating the compensation for a lost, damaged, or destroyed wheelchair or other assistive device shall be the original purchase price of the device.”

Notes to editors

The Montreal Convention (1999)

Civil Aviation Authority advice for traveling with mobility or medical equipment

Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA)

Position of the European Commission 

Lufthansa and Air Canada policies