Tiiiigergirl
<font color=red>Had to be rolled out of the restau
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2000
- Messages
- 782
Does southwest allow people with disabilities additional time to board the plane?
We flew them several years ago and I sustained an injury while on vacation. The girl took me in the wheelchair and then just dumped me. We were treated rudely because I suspect they thought I was faking it to get preferential boarding.
It was the last time we have ever flown SWA.
People have spoken quite highly about them on the board and I'm considering them for our flight in January/February 2004. I need to decide in the next little while as we are almost to that boarding window.
Flash forward to the present. I now have a chronic medical condition that severely limits my mobility. In fact what I thought was overdoing it several years ago and an injury was in fact probably the beginning of the peripherial neuropathy. Now when I travel I always take George, my purple wheelchair and I use a quad cane the rest of the time.
Is it because they incorrectly thought I was faking or are they just unkind to disabled passengers? Do they allow additional time? I can walk down the gangway but usually my husband wheels me and then I slowly make my way into the plane. The additional time isn't just nice, it becomes necessary. Because of the nerve problems, bulkhead seating is needed. I also may have a companion dog. Help!
We flew them several years ago and I sustained an injury while on vacation. The girl took me in the wheelchair and then just dumped me. We were treated rudely because I suspect they thought I was faking it to get preferential boarding.
It was the last time we have ever flown SWA.
People have spoken quite highly about them on the board and I'm considering them for our flight in January/February 2004. I need to decide in the next little while as we are almost to that boarding window.
Flash forward to the present. I now have a chronic medical condition that severely limits my mobility. In fact what I thought was overdoing it several years ago and an injury was in fact probably the beginning of the peripherial neuropathy. Now when I travel I always take George, my purple wheelchair and I use a quad cane the rest of the time.
Is it because they incorrectly thought I was faking or are they just unkind to disabled passengers? Do they allow additional time? I can walk down the gangway but usually my husband wheels me and then I slowly make my way into the plane. The additional time isn't just nice, it becomes necessary. Because of the nerve problems, bulkhead seating is needed. I also may have a companion dog. Help!