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Safer skies and seas: Fresh support for disabled travelers and climate-changed oceans

A new law makes airline travel easier for wheelchair users

Disabled passengers, particularly those who use wheelchairs, say that a lack of sufficient accommodations means that flying comes with a risk of injury, loss of expensive mobility equipment, and humiliation. A reauthorization law will expand passenger protections and provide grants for airports to upgrade infrastructure.

The measure requires large and medium-sized airports to install universal changing stations, which allow caregivers to assist those who cannot use the restroom alone. Passengers will also be able to request seating accommodations, such as extra legroom, on aircraft. The feasibility of allowing wheelchairs in flight will be studied by the Department of Transportation.

Nam Y. Huh/AP/File

An employee pushes a wheelchair at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. New federal laws require employee training to handle wheelchairs.

Why We Wrote This

Courts and lawmakers can focus public attention. In the United States, airlines adopt staff trainings to better support wheelchair users. And an international tribunal for the first time links ocean health to greenhouse gas emissions.

Training is required for airline workers on how to assist and communicate with disabled passengers. The law “represents the most significant effort by Congress in over a decade to make flying safer, easier and more accessible for passengers with disabilities,” said U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, who uses a wheelchair and is chair of the Senate’s aviation subcommittee.
Sources: Disability Scoop, The New York Times

A meta-analysis found that conservation can stop biodiversity loss

Including 186 studies from around the globe, a University of Oxford paper is the first to comprehensively examine whether conservation efforts are successful in general.

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