Legal action
Ensuring disabled people receive support needed to use public transport
Published: 14 June 2016
Last updated: 28 July 2016
What countries does this apply to?
Case details
Protected Characteristic | Disability |
---|---|
Types of equality claim | Discrimination arising from disability, Harassment, Reasonable adjustments |
Court or tribunal | County Court |
Law applies in | England, Scotland, Wales |
Case state | Concluded |
Our involvement | Legal assistance (section 28 of the Equality Act 2006) |
Outcome | Settlement |
Areas of life | Participation |
Case name: C v X Trains and anor
Legal issue
Should train companies provide assistance for disabled passengers?
Background
C is visually impaired and has chronic health problems. She booked assistance for a two-part train journey she was taking with her three-month-old baby. Both of the defendant train companies failed to provide the requested assistance, and the limited help C did receive was chaotic and insensitive. The incidents caused her to have a panic attack.
Why we were involved
This case came within our priority aim relating to transport – public transport supports the economic and social inclusion of disabled people and older people.
What we did
We provided legal assistance using our powers under section 28 of the Equality Act 2006.
What happened
The case settled.
Who will benefit
Studies show that disabled people often feel public transport is largely inaccessible to them which can have a significant impact in many areas of their lives, such as access to employment, services and opportunities to socialise. Providers have a responsibility to make public transport accessible and inclusive. Our support for this case, and its outcome, demonstrates the issue's importance.
Date of hearing
Date concluded
Page updates
Published:
14 June 2016
Last updated:
28 July 2016