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The Intersection of Travel and Disability

Mobility

Pssst. Here’s What No One With A Disability May Have Told You (but they wrote it down here)

October 9, 2019 by Denise Brodey

young woman in wheelchair v fashionably dressed with leopard jacket outdoor shot
How I Arrived in New York Without My Legs

OUR TAKE: We can never get enough of real stories about real people with lived experience—whether they’re testing a new itinerary, telling the tale of how their wheelchair was lost on a plane trip or explaining how the chairs in a restaurant can keep someone in a wheelchair from enjoying the place. Two of our favorites: Why Are Airline Bathrooms So Crappy? and How I Arrived In New York Without My Legs. These real voices give you a hint of how our work—at the intersection of disability and travel—has the possibility to be incredibly impactful thanks to you.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Airlines, Disability Advocates, Mobility

Busting Records & Myths: One Rider Spends 1,000 Days Straight on Rails to Trails

September 26, 2019 by Denise Brodey

Four riders  including Ian Mackay with a backdrop of mountains snow and green grasss
Four riders, including Mackay, tackling the mountains on a gorgeous days out. photo courtesy: Rails to Trails.

It takes a certain kind of dedication to get out on a trail every day. As in, every day. Seven days a week. Rain or shine. Scorching days, freezing days and every kind of day in between. The last day I missed was Halloween 2016, Ian Mackay told Rails to Trails. He surpassed consecutive day number 1,000 in July. In this piece, writer and rider Scott Stark, who also enjoys exploring trails across the country, describes how a serious bike injury changed Mackay’s approach to enjoying time spent trail’riding’.

OUR TAKE:  There is a way for everyone to enjoy the outdoors—and thankfully, some people are driven enough to find that path and share it with the entire state. At the TravelAbility Summit on November 11-13, the focus will always be on ability. We have found there’s an entire world of people like Mackay adventuring through life and will continue to highlight them, helping travel and destination marketers get a more accurate picture of the ‘accessibility’ customer. READ MORE on the Rails to Trails blog.

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Filed Under: Disability Advocates, Mobility, Travel

25+ Tech Companies Invited to Participate in TravelAbility “Launchpad”

September 26, 2019 by Denise Brodey

illustration of a red rocket launching and the words travel ability launchpad: boosting innovation in travel and accessibility

Tourism marketing organizations would feel more confident proposing or expanding accessibility initiatives if they had a greater knowledge of the latest product innovations and how they can be a valuable competitive differentiator. To address this opportunity, TravelAbilitySummit created LaunchPad, a pre-conference workshop planned for the afternoon of November 11, 2019, in San Francisco. 

LaunchPad will bring together socially conscious entrepreneurs, who have created products and services that  make travel easier for people with disabilities, and established travel end users—hotels, airports, attractions, and destinations. “The goal is to connect entrepreneurs with new distribution channels in the travel industry and to help jumpstart new accessibility initiatives,” says Jake Steinman, founder and CEO of both Launchpad and TravelAbility Summit.  The accessible travel market has been estimated to be in excess of $17 billion dollars* annually and growing at a rapid pace as baby boomers age into a disability.

Leading travel media representatives and angel investors who can provide exposure, advice, and capital to help these companies grow will also be attending. “We have received a commitment from Blue Umbrella,” said Steinman, “a disability technology accelerator that will take part in the workshop and keep office hours during the conference to meet one on one with founders. A list of invited attendees for Launchpad is available here.

The creation of LaunchPad is a result of the TravelAbility Summit team’s deep dive into three categories:

  • –a fast-growing accessible technology market
  • –the disability community’s changing needs
  • –feedback from travel marketers asking for next steps to help them to create meaningful accessibility initiatives.

To that end, TravelAbility released The Fab 50  in February—50 products and services that are available to make the travel experience easier for people with disabilities— and from that list, we’ve invited some of the most affordable and practical to present their products and services at LaunchPad in San Francisco.

“Because there hasn’t been a disability travel conference in the U.S. in over 13 years,” explained Steinman, “there hasn’t been a venue dedicated to new assistive technology, apps, products and services designed to help people with disabilities travel more independently. We are looking forward to watching the sparks fly as these communities come together. We’ll be tracking  the outcome to build the business case for accessibility in travel.”

*2015 Open Doors Study on the Accessible Travel Market


(The Fabulous 50 list will be distributed to over 2400 destinations, hotels, attractions and suppliers in travel and disability communities.  

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Filed Under: Hearing, Mobility, Technology, Vision

Top 10 Signs That Accessibility Is Going Mainstream

September 26, 2019 by Denise Brodey

Fashion brands including Tommy Hilfiger, shown above, are expanding their accessible clothing lines. [photo of a young boy and girl in sportswear holding hands and running courtesy Tommy Hilfiger.]

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the number of U.S. residents with a disability is estimated at close to a quarter of the nation’s population, with that figure doubling among those aged 65 and older. “Travelers with a disability represent an underserved but growing segment of the population that has been neglected by the mainstream tour and travel industry,” says Steinman. “The travel industry has a huge opportunity and responsibility to help make travel more accessible—and the time to act is now. In fact, a recent study by the Harris Organization in partnership with Open Doors Organization estimates the size of the disability travel market at $17 billion dollars a year. We invite travel professionals to register now for TravelAbility Summit, here. To help define the market opportunity, this is our first of a series of TravelAbility Summit Insights. Here’s why we see accessibility as an ascending trend:

  1. Requests for wheelchairs at airports grew 30% from 2016 to 2017 and have averaged 17% each year since 2015, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA). 
  2. According to AARP research, over the next 20 years, 75 million Baby Boomers will be aging into disability. This demographic has amassed the largest accumulation of wealth in history—and have the time and desire to travel.
  3. Mattel will debut a doll with a prosthetic leg and another with a wheelchair for Christmas. 
  4. A Travel Weekly survey found that travel agents in one European country alone experienced a 50% increase in inquiries about accessible travel experiences.
  5. The Brussels Airport has hired six people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) to work as X-ray screeners. The Brussels program, part of a pilot project, is reporting positive results.
  6. Over 20,000 travel agents in the U.S .have undergone a one-hour basic autism awareness/response training sessions through IBCCES. Another 5,000 travel agents have been trained by Special Needs Group on accessible wheelchair travel.
  7. The TravelAbility research team has identified over 50 technologies, apps, and products that make everything from traversing mountains to navigating museums more accessible.
  8. Since launching its adaptive clothing line in 2018, the Tommy Hilfiger brand has expanded the collection from children’s clothing to a full adult line.
  9. The Skift Global Forum, the leading trend-forecasting conference in the travel industry, included its first accessible travel presentation, “Accessibility: What’s It Worth,” making the business case for accessible travel.
  10.  Trick or Treat! Target is introducing a line of adaptive costumes for Halloween this year. 

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Mobility, Products, Trends, Uncategorized

Don’t Miss Out on Expert Advice at TravelAbility Summit! Meet A Few of Our Superstar Speakers

September 5, 2019 by Denise Brodey

Meet two of our superstar speakers—and watch for more updates on our speaker’s page. There’s really a lot of talent and expertise in our lineup. Start here:  

Eric Lipp is the founder and executive director of the Open Doors Organization (ODO), which commissioned groundbreaking research on accessible travel identifying the untapped market at 17.3 billion dollars in 2015. He started ODO after personally experiencing the restrictions that people with disabilities face in everyday life. (Eric was diagnosed with Von Hippel Lindau disease at age 30, which resulted in a tumor growth on his spinal cord, ultimately limiting his mobility.) In 2014, Open Doors launched Open Taxis, a centralized taxi dispatch for wheelchair accessible vehicles in Chicago with over 350 vehicles. Passengers can either call Open Taxis for service or use its smartphone app that includes key features such as estimated wait time and an estimated fare quote.

Marc Garcia is president and CEO of Visit Mesa. Under Marc’s leadership Visit Mesa has become the country’s first-ever destination marketing organization designated as a Certified Autism Center by the International Board of Credentialing and Continuing Education Standards (IBCCES). As a parent of a child on the autism spectrum, Marc has raised the bar in the city of Mesa by requesting partner businesses in the hospitality community follow their lead to undergo autism training. Guest-facing staff at Mesa businesses are actively being approached and will complete autism sensitivity and awareness training within the next six months. Prior to joining Visit Mesa, Marc was vice president of Visitor Marketing & Community Development for the Greater Phoenix Visitors & Convention Bureau.

photo of Suzanne Boda courtesy American Airlines PR;  photo of Marc Garcia courtesy IP Photography

You can find out more about all of the speakers on our site, here. 

REGISTER NOW for the two-day event in San Francisco this November! REGISTER NOW

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Disability Advocates, Hearing, Mobility, Speakers 2019, Vision Tagged With: accessibility, American Airlines, Eric Lipp, Open Doors, travel expert, Visit Mesa

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