FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - Wheelchair Procedures and/or Etiquette?
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Old Nov 8, 2006 | 12:41 pm
  #7  
kops2da
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 16
Mobile devices

[QUOTE=Katja]Mainline airlines* offer complimentary wheelchair assistance, usually supplied by airport contractors. When your friends make their reservation, they should call the airline and ask for wheelchair assistance. Generally the passenger(s) will need to get their own selves to the check in counter, and at that point a wheelchair is summoned, with a pusher, who is a contract employee.

Different airports have different policies about whether the pusher is required or not - at DEN, you can wander off with the airport's wheelchair, but you have to leave a driver's license as security (so of course you have to go back and get it before departing).

Tipping the pusher is nice, but not required - back when I used the service, I generally tipped $5.

At security, the passenger will be directed to the area where people with mobility disabilites are hand-searched. The passenger will be asked if he/she can stand to be searched. At the gate, the passenger will be pre-boarded - taken in the wheelchair to the end of the jetway, but will then be expected to stand and walk into the plane. The passenger's personal mobility device (cane, walker, etc) will be stowed (ie, you can't keep it with you at your seat, unless you're really good at surreptiously sliding a cane between your seat and the wall without anyone noticing).

We have never experienced a problem with taking our canes on Northwest or Delta flights. We have flown to Vegas, Hawaii, Atlanta and Chicago. You have to put your cane through security and then it is ok - I put mine by my seat or overhead - no problem. Most big planes have aisle wheelchairs to take you on the plane and to the restroom if necessary. Elaine
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