NEWS RELEASE
NCD #06511
May 17, 2006
Contact: Mark S. Quigley
202-272-2004
202-272-2074 TTY
WASHINGTON, DC - National Council on Disability (NCD) today
released an NCD Position Paper on Access to Airline Self-Service Kiosk Systems, calling on
the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to adopt an updated
Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) standard for accessible design
applicable to these kiosk systems and that DOT then initiate
settlement negotiations with covered air carriers and airports
to bring their kiosk systems into full compliance.
According to NCD chairperson Lex Frieden, "U.S. air carriers
and airports have obligations under federal accessibility laws
and regulations to provide cross-disability access to their
kiosk systems. Those carriers and airports operating kiosk
systems not in conformity with the Americans with Disabilities
Act"s standard for accessible design, which is also ACAA"s
standard, are out of compliance."
"Advances in information technology (IT) have enabled the
airline industry to improve the quality and efficiency of its
services delivery while reducing operating costs. But the
airlines would leave travelers with disabilities out of the IT
loop, failing to offer them the same benefits and convenience
of service available to other travelers. The airlines"
resistance to providing customer services through fully
accessible kiosks and Web sites disregards the capacity of
accessible IT to empower people with disabilities to do for
themselves," Frieden concluded.
Kiosk technology is an essential component of the IT-based
customer self-service business model that is pervading the air-
travel industry. Automated kiosks employed by the industry
(frequently called self-service or check-in kiosks) are
networked peripheral IT devices whose interfaces give consumers
direct access to companies" centralized customer-service
systems.
The air carrier industry has failed to acknowledge its legal
obligations to provide equal access to passengers with
disabilities, advances in access technology, and the
significant economic benefit the industry derives from air
travelers with disabilities.
Although no airline-kiosk vendor serving the U.S. market has
included accessibility among its product features, vendors
confirm that they foresee no significant technical obstacles to
development and deploymentusing existing access technologyof
fully accessible kiosk systems. A leading authority on
accessibility technology estimates that the costs of access
hardware and software modifications for a fully accessible
system would not exceed one to two percent of the overall cost.
However, the airline industry has yet to acknowledge the need
for such a product.
For more information, contact Mark Quigley at 202-272-2004 or 202-272-2074 TTY.
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