Wheelchair user demands better Montreal metro access - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 06:59 PM | Calgary | -8.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Wheelchair user demands better Montreal metro access

A Montreal woman is demanding improvements to the metro system after a wheelchair-access gate closed on her as she was wheeling through it at the Lionel-Groulx station.

Injured woman gets stuck in gate designed for wheelchair access

Metro gate traps wheelchair user

11 years ago
Duration 2:10
Montreal public transit user Aime Louw says the STM needs to take better care of disabled clients.

A Montreal woman is demanding improvements to the metro system after a wheelchair-access gate closed on her as she was wheeling through it at the Lionel-Groulx station.

Aime Louwuses a wheelchair to get around since breaking her femur.

Last week, a friend of hers was pushing her through the access gate especially designed for wheelchairs and strollers. Her injured leg was positioned on a raised footrest.

"I was not even halfway through," Louw said. "The red gate closed around my ankle."

This is the access gate in which Aime Louw's foot was caught as she was being wheeled through.

"I have a broken femur right now,so if I had been a foot farther into the gate, it would have crushed my leg exactly where the femur is broken," she explained.

Metro attendant struggled to free foot

A metro station attendant was summoned to help, but Louw said he didn't know how to force the gate open.

Eventually, Louw's foot was freed, but she wonders how this kind of problem could occurwith an access gate specifically designed to be wheelchair-accessible.

A spokeswoman for theMontreal transit agency (STM)called the incident unfortunate, but she said the access gates are designed to close after they stop detecting movement.She suggested STM clientssolicit helpfrom the ticket booth attendant.

Louw saidshe now asks the attendant tohelp her use the gates that must be rolled open manually.

"Everytime I do that, they say, why don't you use the red gate?" she said. "I tell them it's because it closed around my broken leg."

Only seven metro stations are equipped with elevators and fully wheelchair-accessible.

Under a transport plan adopted in 2008, three metro stations per year were supposed to be renovated for improved access.

That plan is far behind schedule, because of a lack of funds.