Shu Cole of Indiana University will use the money to develop training programs for aviation employees who assist passengers with disabilities.
https://news.iu.edu/live/news/42731-25m-grant-funds-research-to-help-airlines-improve
Shu Cole of Indiana University will use the money to develop training programs for aviation employees who assist passengers with disabilities.
https://news.iu.edu/live/news/42731-25m-grant-funds-research-to-help-airlines-improve
Accessible space travel may leapfrog accessible air travel. Blue Origin is making their craft accessible from the very beginning. From Facebook via Christopher Woods:
DATE LINE: Tuesday 12th November 2024
LOCATION: Blue Origin, Seattle
DISCUSSION: Accessible Passenger Space Travel.
This is not as far away as we think, the fact that Blue Origin are building this into its DNA from the start and not leaving it as an afterthought is refreshing. This is not just about innovation, it’s about basic human and civil rights.The Air4All consortium & Delta Flight Products offered insight and experience from air travel.Air Travel stakeholders that typically stall, are now beginning to look very had to initiate long overdue solutions. It is their own tail they are chasing, but the air travel industry must do this as a priority (and I mean priority!) Making Space guru’s Keely Keely Cat Wells & Sophie Morgan triggered many conversations.
The wheelchair seats are coming, y’all. I repeat, THE WHEELCHAIR SEATS ARE COMING. But the airlines would like them to take up as little room as possible, and do this as cheaply as possible, so it’s up to us to make sure they think about the needs of the users of big honking power chairs as well as the spindly little sport chairs. Carve out some time to fill out this survey from the Human Engineering Research Lab and explain your challenges with air transportation:
New Mobility’s latest issue includes an article with advice on what to do when your wheelchair is lost by an airline:
Read the rest on the New Mobility website.
We interrupt your regularly scheduled gripe session to bring you some rare good news. Leslie Irby of Atlanta earned her official sport pilots license after successfully completing her first solo flight through Able Flight, an organization that strives to help people with disabilities get to the cockpit. This makes Irby the first black woman with a disability to get a pilots license, according to the website Because of Them We Can. Read more about Irby’s journey there!