A Guide Dog at Gatwick Airport; A New Travel Companion on Trains
Eleanor Burke recently had problems when going through security with her guide dog at Gatwick Airport. She and Gatwick Airport provide details of what happened.
Eleanor Burke recently travelled to Ireland via Gatwick Airport with her guide dog. She has made this journey many times before but this time was held up for an hour in the security area by a member of staff that was not satisfied with her guide dog's documentation. We invited her onto the program to tell us what happened. Adam Jones is Gatwick's Head of Passenger Services, he explains the steps they will be taking to ensure this does not happen to other guide dog owners.
Avanti West Coast are trialling a new WhatsApp messaging service, called Travel Companion, that will allow disabled passengers contact someone for help before, during and after their train journeys. Ricky West and Martin Byrne are both visually impaired and are working on the service, they tell us what people can expect from it. The number to contact the service is 07980037037.
And an update on the state of the tactile paving installations across the UK's rail network.
Presenter: Peter White
Producer: Beth Hemmings
Production Coordinator: Liz Poole
Website image description: Peter White sits smiling in the centre of the image, wearing a dark green jumper. Above Peter's head is the Â鶹ԼÅÄ logo (three individual white squares house each of the three letters). Bottom centre and overlaying the image are the words "In Touch" and the Radio 4 logo (the word Radio in a bold white font, with the number 4 inside a white circle). The background is a bright mid-blue with two rectangles angled diagonally to the right. Both are behind Peter, one of a darker blue and the other is a lighter blue.
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In Touch transcript: 28/02/2023
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IN TOUCH – A Guide Dog at Gatwick Airport; A New Travel Companion on Trains
TX:Ìý 28.02.2023Ìý 2040-2100
PRESENTER:Ìý ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý PETER WHITE
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PRODUCER:ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý BETH HEMMINGS
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White
Good evening.Ìý Good news and bad tonight on what’s turned out to be something of a travel special.Ìý Later on, we’ll be hearing about a new dedicated service for disabled passengers by one train company and what they claim it will add to the assistance already on offer.Ìý And the long awaited news that the provision of tactile paving on platform edges at all railway stations has been significantly speeded up.Ìý Can this new deadline be met?
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But for one airline passenger the experience hasn’t been so positive.Ìý We’re used to hearing, on this programme, about visually impaired passengers being left high and dry, waiting to be escorted to their flights but what happened, recently, to Eleanor Burke is a new one on us.Ìý Eleanor travels regularly back and forth between the UK and Ireland, where she has relatives, with her guide dog.Ìý Normally, it’s a pretty straightforward exercise, that is until what happened to her a few weeks ago.Ìý Eleanor is with us.Ìý
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So, just explain, what happened and how it differed from what normally happens and should happen.
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Burke
Good evening, Peter.Ìý I travel regularly with Ryan Air and Ryan Air have provision when you’re booking your flight on the booking form to say if you require assistance.Ìý Another requirement from Ryan Air is that you send them all the relevant information in relation to your guide dog… that includes my pet passport and also the yellow book which is issued by Guide Dog UK and normally this goes quite smoothly.
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White
So, let me be clear, Eleanor, do you actually need any physical documents on you, as far as the evidence about your dog is concerned?
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Burke
No.Ìý So, this is it.Ìý So, I went to go through the scanner and the security man asked me if I had a letter from the airline.Ìý I said, I didn’t have a hard copy letter but that on my luggage I had all the relevant passport for the guide dog plus the guide dog’s yellow book.Ìý He said, no, that wasn’t good enough, he wanted a letter.Ìý On my phone I had an email from the accessibility department at Ryan Air saying that they were happy for me to travel with my guide dog.Ìý I also, then, had my boarding pass, which I had in electronic format, this clearly showed my seat number and that I was travelling with a guide dog.
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White
So, as far as you’re concerned, at that point you had everything that you needed.Ìý The airline had everything that was needed.Ìý So, what went wrong and what happened next?
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Burke
Well, from what I could ascertain the security man seemed to have really dug his heels in on this one.Ìý He contacted Ryan Air by telephone to find out what was going on.Ìý It would appear that he also contacted the Ryan Air representative ground staff, she then said to me that travelling in future I should go to the Ryan Air desk, once I got to the airport, and I should ask for my boarding pass to be printed out, so this was news to me.Ìý And I had been kept waiting for one hour for all of this.Ìý One might expect there could be up to a 10 minute wait but never one hour.Ìý So, I was very upset by this.Ìý But I was really more upset by the way I was being treated and I just felt that I wasn’t getting the respect – just the respect of one person to another.Ìý I felt that I was being treated in a patronising way and I felt powerless.Ìý And I know one cannot get short-tempered in these situations because otherwise one is accused of being ill-mannered, so I had to try and go along and be as patient as possible.
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White
But given that you’d done this quite a lot of times before, were you given any explanation of why there was a problem on this occasion?
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Burke
No, no explanation.Ìý After one hour we were just told you can go through now.Ìý It was only, subsequently, when I wrote in that it was suggested to me that perhaps the security person needed more training.Ìý But I really put it to Gatwick customer service that I really had felt discriminated against.Ìý Lots and lots of people were going through within that one hour, I was held back because I had a guide dog.Ìý Initially, I was told that they had viewed CCTV and I was pleased with that because that authenticated what I was saying.Ìý But the customer service department felt that I had not been discriminated against.Ìý I think they were also trying to blame the pandemic, saying they had new staff since post-pandemic and maybe more training was required and more experience.
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White
What more would you like to see done as a result of your experience?Ìý I guess a bit more than the offer of a bunch of flowers?
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Burke
Yes the offer of a bunch of flowers is rather – you know very poor compensation, I feel, for the way I was treated.Ìý I would really leave that up to Gatwick Airport to make me some form of suitable compensation in recognition of the way I had been treated and to actually recognise that I had been treated less favourably, in other words discriminated against, on this occasion.
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White
Eleanor Burke, thank you very much indeed.
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Well, listening to that has been Adam Jones.Ìý Adam is Head of Passenger Services at Gatwick.Ìý Adam, quite simply, if you could, why did this happen, given that it seems to be accepted, generally, that Eleanor had done absolutely everything she could have done and should have done to inform people she was travelling with a guide dog?
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Jones
So, firstly, I have to apologise profusely for Miss Burke’s experience here.Ìý As you said, she had done everything right and unfortunately, on this occasion, some of our security team didn’t follow their training or our processes which caused the issue she had in the security area.Ìý We’re taking steps, obviously, having reviewed this incident to make sure this doesn’t happen again.
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White
I mean should people be administering security if they haven’t been trained properly and don’t know the rules?
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Jones
We have a very large airport security team here who are all trained to the standards set by the CAA, which we’re regularly audited on, and we train them for every eventuality, including this.Ìý On this occasion, like I said, I have to apologise, we let Miss Burke down.Ìý We’ve refocused the individuals involved to make sure they know how to act next time and the wider security team will be briefed on what steps to take in a similar situation and if they’re unsure they can quickly summon a duty manager who will make sure anyone such as Miss Burke gets through really quickly.
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White
This is actually one of the questions I was going to ask you because one is used to – but I mean I go as a blind person, go through security quite a lot and you do have this problem that it’s a fairly chaotic situation for a start, the rules seem to change from day-to-day – do I have to take off a coat, do I have to take off my shoes – and I frequently find myself stuck on the other side of security with a piece of my specialist equipment being sort of puzzled over but not having the chance to talk to anybody about it.Ìý I mean how can somebody summon qualified help when you get a problem like the one Eleanor had?
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Jones
So, you should be absolutely be able to ask any member of our staff for help and if you’re not getting the help you need from them they should call a duty manager, who’s always available in the security area, to come and help.Ìý Obviously, if passengers are travelling with special assistance support from our service provider they can, of course, also be on hand to assist you as well.
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White
I mean I just wonder, is this really a security issue?Ìý I mean surely you’re looking for far more important things when carrying out a security check than someone with a guide dog.
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Jones
Of course, part of the security requirement is to make sure no one crosses from the landside to the airside part of the airport unless they’re permitted to and are travelling.Ìý And this involves all sorts and checking that any animals with them are service animals and can also go through security.Ìý As I said, that should have been a seamless, easy, process for Miss Burke, it wasn’t on this occasion and we are taking steps, having reviewed the incident, to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
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White
So, what lessons does Gatwick take from this incident?
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Joens
Well, as part of our investigation, we have identified that across the 40 airlines who fly from Gatwick, there are some slightly different processes in letting us know that a passenger is travelling with an assistance dog. ÌýSo, our accessibility manager is going to work with our airlines to try and get one common process, that everyone’s aware of, everyone follows and that will make it easier for our staff, then, to ensure they’re following the correct process and procedure.Ìý And that’s taking place right now.
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White
I’d like to pick up one thing with you.Ìý Eleanor mentioned that the pandemic got mentioned, aren’t people getting really rather fed up with the fact that the pandemic is cited every time there’s a bit of a problem?Ìý I mean, you know, the rules have relaxed now for over a year, isn’t it time that, in that sense, things are back to normal and people who are doing the job know what they’re doing?
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Jones
Yes and that is absolutely not an excuse in this situation.Ìý Our customer service team, I think, pointed out that we’d hired 400 new airport security officers, so they’re in the central search area, we have trained them all appropriately.Ìý Maybe we just need to review and make sure that everyone is fully aware of how to handle situations such as this.Ìý But, of course, you’re right, this isn’t a result of the covid pandemic.
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White
So, just to be clear, one final point, Adam, for future travellers with guide dogs, what do they actually need to have done in order to comply with the various protocols that might be in place?
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Jones
So, right now they should follow the procedure their individual airline sets down. So, as Miss Burke did with Ryan Air, follow Ryan Air’s process and that will make sure that we get notified that a passenger’s coming with an assistance dog.Ìý Whilst I know it failed on this occasion and we’ll look to make sure that process can be improved, it works for the vast majority of the time and so people should just follow their normal process.
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White
So, you don’t actually need, as Eleanor was told she did, to actually present any documents as you go through, any paper documents?
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Jones
That’s correct.Ìý Unfortunately, as well as our security officers not following their training and process, Ryan Air’s handling agent at the airport also gave Miss Burke some incorrect information there.Ìý So, Miss Burke being a regular traveller through Gatwick and over to Ireland, did exactly what she should do and as I said, I apologise for her experience here and we’re going to work hard to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
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White
Adam Jones and before that Eleanor Burke, thank you very much.
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Well, taking your guide dog on the train should, hopefully, be a rather simpler process than taking to the air but there are still plenty of things which can go wrong when you’re on the trains and the travel assistance offered at stations doesn’t always go without a hitch.Ìý Well now, one train company, Aventi West Coast, has just launched a dedicated communications channel to provide disabled passengers with instant help during their journey, in, what they’re describing, as a first for the UK rail industry.Ìý Called Travel Companion it will use the messaging app WhatsApp to connect you to someone who can offer specialist support while travelling.
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Well Martin Byrne and Ricky West are both visually impaired and they’ve been recruited to advise on this service.
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Ricky, if I can come to you first.Ìý What kind of situations do you visualise where this service can be used?
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West
We’re hoping it’s going to be a layer support prior to your journey, during your journey and after your journey.Ìý So, it could be your correct tickets, knowing if you’ve got the right one.Ìý So, what you could do is get in contact with us and ask – have I got the right ticket – because we’ve partnered with Be My Eyes, so an independent app that, hopefully, most people know about and use, that connects through to the Aventi West Coast team, that would be myself and Martin in the social media team that have had accessibility training and we can identify that ticket for you.
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White
So, you’re anticipating this is going to be used mainly by people who are travelling on their own?
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West
It’s for anyone, it’s for any accessible requirement can sort of come through and get help and support.Ìý So, that’s a prior to your journey.Ìý During your journey people might need to identify their seats, they may, potentially, have been on the journey a long time and need to identify their luggage.Ìý If they need help and support from a train manager or onboard crew, we can get in touch with them and get them to come to the passenger, instead of them trying to having to find an onboard staff member.
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White
So, if you’re comparing it, for example, with the service that is offered at the moment with assistance with getting on the train, the main thing you’re anticipating this is going to be useful for, is actually during your journey?
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West
Yes, during the journey.Ìý So, passenger assistance is there to help you onboard, with connections and moving around the station.
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Byrne
Passenger assistance is a great service and it’s there to enrich the service, to sort of add extra value on to that.Ìý We will work hand-in-hand with those teams.Ìý And I think it gives that peace of mind and encourages independent travel, as well.Ìý I think it, hopefully, builds the confidence that there is somebody there throughout the journey because there may be an element of fear, people getting on the train, passenger assistance walking away, and you’re left on the train alone.Ìý Hopefully, with this methodology and connections to ourselves you can reach out to us if that need is there.
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White
One point I would like to make to you, I mean, WhatsApp is still a digital service, which requires the use of a smartphone, now that still limits the number of people who can use it.Ìý Is there a non-digital alternative to this?
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Byrne
Now, at this point, I have to say there isn’t and I will stress this is a trial.Ìý And what we are willing to look at and I’ve already investigated the options around going to text messaging, it’s, unfortunately, it’s the sort of – the inhouse management to keep it real time, is the challenge for management of this.Ìý But it’s not to say we won’t go down that route if we can get the technology in place moving forward.Ìý We understand there’s going to be people out there that will use text messages only and we are looking, hopefully long-term, to get a solution in place but, as we say, for this trial, at the moment, it is only WhatsApp.
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White
Martin Byrne, Ricky West, thank you both very much.Ìý And for those of you who are interested in trying out this service, the WhatsApp number you will find on our website, address at the end of the programme.
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And it is true that however confident and competent a visually impaired rail traveller you might be, things do go wrong on stations, which are potentially dangerous places.Ìý It’s something Sekha Hall knows only too well as his recent email reminded us.
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Hall (email)
It’s nearly three years ago that my partner, Mr Cleveland Gervais, died at Eden Park Station.Ìý He was registered blind and there was no tactile paving on the platform he fell from.Ìý I’m contacting you to see if you can help me find out what progress has there been on installing tactile paving across the rail network.
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White
Well, Sekha is referring to the roughened material, which has been fitted to some, but by no means all, platform edges in order to give a warning that you’re approaching a potential fall on to the tracks.Ìý In the inquiry, which followed Sekha’s partner’s death, which we reported on extensively on In Touch, it was established the lack of such a tactile warning, was a contributory factor to his partner’s death.Ìý Well, we, and a number of organisations representing blind people, such as the RNIB and Guide Dogs, have been persistently drawing attention to the fact that Network Rail had initially said that without more resources, they couldn’t complete this work until 2029.Ìý But in the light of Mr Hall’s request for more information to us, we’ve been seeking confirmation from Network Rail and the Department for Transport that reports of more government money being available could be confirmed.
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Well, in a statement, Network Rail have told us:Ìý “Our programme to install tactile platforms continues bolstered by £75 million, which we were given by government last year.Ìý The programme is making good progress now with cross-industry help from train operating companies and it covers England, Wales and Scotland at all stations where tactile platforms had not been part of existing renewal plans.Ìý The funding runs until March 2025.â€
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Well, this sounds like good news and is certainly being interpreted as such by the RNIB and Guide Dogs.Ìý We are still trying to ascertain if funding continues until March 2025 can be interpreted as work will be completed by 2025.Ìý But as we record this programme, we’ve still not had that confirmation.Ìý Watch this space and meanwhile listen out for this temporary safety solution, which you’ll hear at a number of stations:
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Station announcement
Please be aware that some platforms at this station have no or only partial tactile paving on the platform edge.
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White
You have been warned.Ìý
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Well, that’s it for today.Ìý Contacting us does make a difference.Ìý You can email intouch@bbc.co.uk, leave a voice message on 0161 8361338 or go to our website bbc.co.uk/intouch where you’ll also find that WhatsApp number.
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From me, Peter White, producer Beth Hemmings and studio manager Amy Brennan, goodbye.
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- Tue 28 Feb 2023 20:40Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4
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In Touch
News, views and information for people who are blind or partially sighted