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The Intersection of Travel and Disability

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TravelAbility to Host Emerging Markets Summit 2024 on Inclusive Travel in San Francisco

October 28, 2023 by Dan Tobin

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, October 11, 2023 – TravelAbility, the leading organization for accessible and inclusive travel, announced today that it will host its Emerging Markets Summit on October 28-30, 2024 at the Argonaut Hotel in San Francisco. The summit will bring together travel industry professionals, disability advocates, and travelers with diverse needs to explore the latest trends and best practices in inclusive travel.

The Argonaut Hotel, located in the historic Fisherman’s Wharf, is one of the most accessible hotels in San Francisco, according to several travelers with disabilities who praise its facilities and its services. The hotel offers spacious rooms, roll-in showers, grab bars, lowered counters, and other amenities that cater to the needs of travelers with a range of abilities.

The summit will provide travel industry professionals with a big-picture view and concrete strategies for tapping the growing market of accessible travel. Topics include:

  • How to design and market inclusive travel products and services
  • How to reach and engage travelers with disabilities and other emerging markets
  • How to create accessible and inclusive destinations and experiences
  • How to leverage technology and innovation to enhance accessibility and inclusion
  • How the emerging markets of diversity, sustainability, and accessibility intersect one another.

The summit will also offer two exclusive concurrent sessions for attendees who want to deepen their knowledge and skills in inclusive travel. The first session is a two-day immersive accessibility training for travel professionals, led by TravelAbility Ambassador Kristy Durso, who has developed an in-depth accessibility certification program. The second session is a half-day workshop on the travel needs of senior travelers, in collaboration with AARP.

“We are excited to host this summit and share our vision of making travel accessible and inclusive for everyone,” said Jake Steinman, the founder and CEO of TravelAbility. “We invite all travel industry professionals to join us and learn from each other.”

This year’s summit in Savannah sold out. To register for the summit or learn more about TravelAbility, visit or follow TravelAbility on Facebook and LinkedIn.

TravelAbility is dedicated to making travel possible for everyone, regardless of their abilities. In its five-year history, the organization has established itself within the tourism industry as a leading innovator, advocate, and resource on accessible travel.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessible Meetings, Autism, Conferences & Events, Disability Advocates, Disability Awareness, Education, Expert Q&A, Family Travel, Hidden Disabilities, Hotels, Museums & Attractions, Neurodiversity, Parks and Public spaces, Restaurants, The Arts, Travel Industry People Tagged With: accessibility, Autism, Hotels, travel

DOT Launches Campaign to Raise Awareness of Rights of Airline Passengers Who Use Wheelchairs

October 26, 2023 by Debbie Austin

A man in a wheelchair navigating a crowded airline terminal

The US Department of Transportation is marking the 37th anniversary of the Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) by initiating the #AccessibleAirTravel campaign to underscore the right of air travelers with disabilities to safe, dignified, and accessible air travel.

“Airline passengers with disabilities deserve to travel safely and with dignity,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. “DOT is proud to partner with the aviation industry and members of the disability community to ensure that all travelers with disabilities know their rights.”

As part of the launch, the DOT emphasized some of the actions the Biden administration has taken or is taking to improve the air travel experience of individuals using wheelchairs, including:

  • To address many of the significant barriers facing passengers who use wheelchairs, the Department has initiated a rule proposing to make it an automatic violation of ACAA regulations for airlines to mishandle a passenger’s wheelchair.
  • In July 2023, DOT finalized a rule which requires airlines to make lavatories on new, single-aisle aircraft more accessible.Under this final rule, airlines are required to take various steps to improve the accessibility of these lavatories short of increasing their size in the short term.
  • DOT has begun laying the groundwork for a potential rule that would allow passengers to stay in their own wheelchairs when they fly. Read more.

Our TakeAway: We applaud the DOT’s new campaign and the actions it is taking to improve the air travel experience for passengers who use wheelchairs. But we have to wonder how much can be done to improve the accessibility of lavatories without increasing their size?

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Filed Under: Accessibility, ADA//Law, Airlines, Government, Mobility, Technology, Transportation, TravelAbility Summit Tagged With: accessibility, advocacy, airlines, airplane travel, airports, travel

What Does a Braille Business Card Communicate?

October 26, 2023 by Debbie Austin

A braille business card paired with a logo of Blind in Mind: The Braille Superstore

In a thoughtful commentary on his Evengrounds blog, Tom Babinzski considers all angles of why you may or may not want to invest in a braille business card. In one telling statistic, Tom illustrates how small the audience may be for the practical use of the card: “I have only found information from the United States,” Tom writes, “but approximately 90 percent of people without functional vision do not read braille.” On the other hand, 90% of people who are blind and in the workforce read braille; the card may also have its benefits in the way it signals your commitment to inclusivity. Read more.

Our TakeAway: It’s not for everyone but the braille business card has its uses depending on your business and target market—although the uses may be more symbolic than practical. It may be prudent to print two sets of business cards.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Disability Awareness, Products, Trends, Vision Tagged With: accessibility, blindness, braille, business, Disability, networking, travel

UK Tour Operator Becomes the First in the Country to Offer British Sign Language Interpreters

October 26, 2023 by Debbie Austin

Sign language interpreter signing in front of a background image of smiling passengers beside a cruise ship

A great tour company is all about access—access to information, expertise, and assistance when things go wrong. TUI, a leading UK tour operator, is extending that level of access to the Deaf and hard of hearing community providing sign language interpreters who connect travelers with TUI agents.  The free service is the result of a game-changing partnership between TUI and SignLive, which houses the Assisted Travel Team that is available seven days a week via an app or a browser.

“We’re delighted to be working with TUI to make travel more accessible for Deaf people,” said Fiona Mackay, COO of SignLive. “This partnership makes communication smoother and the overall experience of going on holiday much easier for British Sign Language users. Customers can travel with confidence knowing they can communicate via an interpreter throughout their journey.” Read more.

Our TakeAway: This is a major breakthrough in accessible travel that will blaze the trail for other deaf tour programs.  And it can be easily replicated as a new niche in America. Note: British Sign Language is a completely different language from American Sign Language. The two share only 30% of the signs.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessible Meetings, Digital Accessibility, Disability Advocates, Government, Hearing, Hotels, Museums & Attractions, Products, Restaurants, Technology, Transportation, Travel Tagged With: accessibility, deaf, hard of hearing, tour operators, travel, travel agency, UK

Visit Lauderdale Expands Its Embrace of the Hidden Disabilities Sunflower; Its Convention Center is First in North America to Adopt the Program

October 26, 2023 by Debbie Austin

Logo for US chapter of Hidden Disabilities Sunflower includes a close up of a sunflower and an American flag

Arriving at an unfamiliar convention center can be a confusing experience for anyone but particularly for travelers with disabilities, hidden or visible. The Greater Fort Lauderdale/Broward County Convention Center is employing a range of tools to make sure all travelers feel welcome from the moment they pass through the door. The new approach represents a first-of-its-kind partnership with the Hidden Disabilities Sunflower.

The convention center is adding a variety of cues to indicate when someone needs special assistance at the facility. A permanent space will be dedicated to providing a person with a hidden disability or a traveling companion various Sunflower products, such as a lanyard, badge, wristband or pin.  And all convention center employees will be trained on how to spot and help someone with a hidden disability.

The initiative is just the latest chapter in Visit Lauderdale’s proactive moves to create a warm and inclusive welcome for every traveler.  The Sunflower, for example, has been incorporated into Visit Lauderdale’s accessible tourism marketing for the past two years and was subsequently adopted by Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. 

“Visit Lauderdale is committed to providing everyone a safe and supportive environment and has long championed inclusion and accessibility tourism by removing all barriers to a quality experience for everyone,” said Richard Gray, senior vice president of Inclusion and Accessibility at Visit Lauderdale. “We embraced the Hidden Disabilities Sunflower program as soon as we learned of it and couldn’t be prouder that our newly renovated and expanded convention center is the very first on the continent to implement the program.” Read more.

 Our TakeAway: Credit Visit Lauderdale for the foresight to realize that their convention center will now not only be accessible for meetings and conventions, but also for the numerous local events and festivals that use the convention center.   Credit Sunflower creators for coming up with an image that is simultaneously subtle and powerful. The growth of the Sunflower is one of the accessible travel industry’s most promising trends.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessibility Funding, Accessible Meetings, ADA//Law, Autism, Conferences & Events, Disability Advocates, Disability Awareness, Education, Government, Hearing, Hidden Disabilities, Mental Health, Neurodiversity, Parks and Public spaces, Products, Technology, Transportation, Travel, Trends Tagged With: accessibility, travel

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