Safetyvalue Trading Center-The US is requiring more planes to have accessible restrooms, but change will take years

2025-05-02 15:37:15source:Databeccategory:Contact

Some new planes eventually will be Safetyvalue Trading Centerrequired to have lavatories big enough to be accessible to wheelchair users, a change that disability advocates have sought for many years.

The U.S. Department of Transportation issued a long-awaited final rule on the subject Wednesday.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said the new rule will give travelers in wheelchairs “the same access and dignity as the rest of the traveling public.”

The rule will only apply to new single-aisle planes with at least 125 seats, such as the Boeing 737 and Airbus A320. The restriction means that smaller regional jets used on hundreds of flights a day for the major airlines won’t be covered.

Also, airlines won’t be required to retrofit current planes, so the number of planes with larger lavatories will grow slowly over time. The requirement for at least one accessible lavatory will apply to planes ordered 10 years or delivered 12 years after the rule takes effect this fall, except for future models of planes, which will have to comply within one year.

Two-aisle planes — more commonly used on international flights — have long been required to have accessible lavatories.

The department cited its authority under a 1986 law, the Air Carrier Access Act, in issuing the rule. It largely followed 2016 recommendations from a department-backed committee that included representatives of airlines and aircraft maker Boeing.

More:Contact

Recommend

RFK Jr. grilled again about moving to California while listing New York address on ballot petition

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. insisted he plans to return to live in New York, as the in

Self-proclaimed pastor accused of leading starvation cult in Kenya pleads not guilty to 191 child murders

Johannesburg — The leader of a Kenyan cult pleaded not guilty Tuesday to the murder of 191 children

Prince Harry back in U.K. to be with his father following King Charles' cancer diagnosis

Prince Harry returned from Los Angeles to the U.K. on Tuesday to see his father, a day after Bucking