Disabled man drags himself off plane after Air Canada fails to offer wheelchair (1 Viewer)

Optimus Prime

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Air Canada about to write a huge check
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Air Canada has been forced to apologize after a man with spastic cerebral palsy was forced to drag himself off a plane when the flagship carrier failed to provide a wheelchair for him.

Rodney Hodgins, 49, a hardware salesman from British Columbia who requires the use of a motorized wheelchair, flew to Las Vegas with his wife, Deanna, to celebrate their anniversary in August.

But when the plane landed, the flight attendant told the couple there wasn’t time to get a wheelchair on board before the plane had to prepare for takeoff again, Deanna Hodgins wrote in a recent Facebook post.

When the attendant said Hodgins would have to pull himself off the plane alone, the couple at first thought she was joking – but then she repeated the request.

“I said, ‘Of course I can’t. I’m in a wheelchair. I can’t walk,’” he told the Canadian Press.

Hodgins was forced to use his upper body strength to haul himself past 12 rows of seats, with his wife holding his legs.

In her Facebook post, Deanna Hodgins said the event left the couple devastated.

“It took us struggling, in front of a dozen people as some looked away and others looked on with shame, to get him off that plane … he hurt his legs and I hurt my back – emotionally a lot more was hurt … my husband’s human rights were trampled on and Air Canada won’t respond to us, and never did reach out like they promised,” she wrote. “Rod is the most beautiful human on the planet and didn’t deserve this at all.”

She said the couple had planned the trip for eight months and made sure they took care of all requirements on their end. “Air Canada failed us in every sense.”

The company acknowledged Hodgins received inadequate support.

“We use the services of a third party wheelchair assistance specialist in Las Vegas to provide safe transport on and off aircraft,” the statement read. “Following our investigation into how this serious service lapse occurred, we will be evaluating other mobility assistance service partners in Las Vegas.”………

 
So very shameful on the part of Air Canada, there should have been a wheelchair waiting for him when the plane arrived to Vegas like I've seen deplaning from flights all around the country/world. So humiliating for he and his wife, I hope they sue for as much as possible...
 
So very shameful on the part of Air Canada, there should have been a wheelchair waiting for him when the plane arrived to Vegas like I've seen deplaning from flights all around the country/world. So humiliating for he and his wife, I hope they sue for as much as possible...


its called scapegoating:

 
….my husband’s human rights were trampled on and Air Canada won’t respond to us, and never did reach out like they promised,” she wrote.

Doubly shameful but not surprising

But now that the media is involved they’ll reach out now (I’m sure with a “please don’t sue” settlement offer)
 
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This poor guy shouldn't take less than a couple million and free air fare for life.
How absurd and humiliating.
I would have tried to help, but I imagine there would be a major degree of difficulty given that you can't really hold him up from the sides and navigate the isle. I suppose you could piggyback him with a rear spotter? Still, never should have came down to this.
 
no one stood up to HELP This man off??

What #@!#@!# world do we live in????
Classic textbook example of "bystander effect" in Social Psychology. People stand around and watching these embarassing, humiliating types of events get so shocked, stunned or frozen in fear or terror they either don't think or lack the courage and initiative to help the persons in trouble or they believe someone else in the crowd will step up and solve the problem efficiently. Or that the problem, as it is, will solve itself.

Stanley Millgram's fear and obedience experiments in the early 60's came to a similar, likely more damning set of conclusions that the Stanford Prison experiment did with Dr. Philip Lombardo about a decade later.
 
its called scapegoating:

I always thought that the airport operated all those services. I mean, that would make sense to me. That way everyone gets the same "service" as everyone else. This though, seems like a screwy way to go.
 
This really hits home...been completely paralyzed once and partially paralyzed a couple times. Really hope those people were told to stay in their seats

How can an airport not have wheelchairs just in case? It isn't like people only have issues on the plane
 
Classic textbook example of "bystander effect" in Social Psychology. People stand around and watching these embarassing, humiliating types of events get so shocked, stunned or frozen in fear or terror they either don't think or lack the courage and initiative to help the persons in trouble or they believe someone else in the crowd will step up and solve the problem efficiently. Or that the problem, as it is, will solve itself.

Stanley Millgram's fear and obedience experiments in the early 60's came to a similar, likely more damning set of conclusions that the Stanford Prison experiment did with Dr. Philip Lombardo about a decade later.
"Lack of a backbone effect"
So shocked or frozen in fear when they see someone in distress? WTF?
I sure hope they never need help themselves.
I don't know, maybe it's a southern thing but I see people helping people way more often than not.
Or maybe I'm delusional and just hope that most people are decent.
 

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