http://www.timeforchoice.co.uk/ Thousands of Wheelchair Users Affected by Taxi Discrimination
24/01/2012
Figures provided by the Departments for Transport and Work & Pensions show that as many as quarter of a million wheelchair users are open to adverse treatment as a result of restrictive taxi licensing restrictions.
Just eleven of the UK’s 375 licensing authorities still cling to the antiquated ‘turning circle’ rule, which rules most modern vehicles out of being used as hackney cabs in these towns and cities. Tragically for disabled people, this means that thousands of wheelchair users face using taxi fleets dominated by vehicles ill-suited to accommodating them safely.
‘Turning circle’ fleets may or may not cause traffic chaos by swinging a ‘U-ee’ at short notice but they certainly do not provide flat floor space for turning a wheelchair. The problem is that ‘London-style’, which make up more than 90% of these fleets, are in theory capable of accepting a wheelchair occupant.
In practice, however, the lack of flat-floor space in such taxis makes manoeuvring a wheelchair into the correct position for travel exceedingly difficult or, in many cases, impossible. Think disabled bedroom or disabled toilet and you’ll soon recognise the fundamental design requirements for turning wheeled devices.
Lacking this vital room to manoeuvre, wheelchair users are typically left to travel facing sideways in the cab, with their seat completely unsecured to the vehicle.
National Health Service figures show that there are an estimated 1.2 million wheelchair users in the UK. Across the eleven remaining ‘turning circle’ authorities this equates to 256,000 wheelchair users. Further research carried out for the Department for Transport evidences that the size and complexity of wheelchairs is growing.
In our turning circle areas, this leaves upwards of 188,000 users of moderate length wheelchairs with little practical prospect of being safely positioned and secured in local taxis. Of these, 39,000 people with larger wheelchairs have no chance whatsoever of being positioned correctly for a safe journey.
Frustratingly, all of the local authorities concerned could help resolve this alarming safety issue overnight, simply be amending their taxi licensing conditions to permit more modern, more accessible vehicles.
Just like the other 364 licensing authorities do already.
96% of wheelchair users in London style cabs travel sideways and unsecured.