Help. Airport troubles

Conniequeen

Mouseketeer
Joined
Jun 4, 2018
Just got home from Florida on Sat. (Not Disney). Flew Delta. Returned car to Alamo. I can not walk without severe pain for very long.Also have COPD. Returned car at Alamo. Walked to terminal and asked for assistance. NO one would help us. No one would call for help, unless we were flying with the airline. We asked people that were not connected to a airline, and they would not help. We put luggage on cart, so I could lean on it. I was in tears. We ended up walking all the way to the Delta counter, where they finally helped us. Had to use inhaler. The next day I woke up and could not walk. It took most of the day moving slowly to get the pain out of my leg. I am retuning to Florida in 3 weeks to go to Disney with my daughters family. We were going to use sunshine flyer, but I can NOT walk that again. My daughter will also need assistance, but flying Suncountry. What can we do. Don’t public places have to help people with disabilities? It’s making me not wanting to go! Help
 
MCO is one of my least favorite airports. I wouldn't expect much there. People on these boards have gotten mobility help and had some good experiences, but I would take this into my hands if it's this severe. MCO is packed with people asking for this kind of help, and it's a stuggling airport on its best day.

An option would be to locally rent a power chair and just take it with you. Walking at Disney is going to be harder than getting to an airport gate, so you probably need it anyway. The old Mears used to have a wheelchair lift, and I think it was the same buses. I actually stored a Whill Ci underneath and we took our person to a normal seat. It didn't look like the Sunshine buses were accessible. Mears also has accessible taxi service.

There's no medal for toughing it out. Get the assistance you need.
 
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An option would be to locally rent a power chair and just take it with you. Walking at Disney is going to be harder than getting to an airport gate, so you probably need it anyway.
Not many places rent powerchairs. Those that do often have a strict policy of the person renting it to already have prior experience. I.E. already own one, so most people at this point tend to bring their own powerchair, since they’re used to driving it and knowing how it works compared to having to learn a completely different chair, oftentimes one that’s not made for their needs.
The old Mears used to have a wheelchair lift, and I think it was the same buses. It didn't look like the Sunshine buses were accessible. Mears also has accessible taxi service.
Sunshine buses are accessible, you just need to mark it down on the reservation form.
 
Not many places rent powerchairs. Those that do often have a strict policy of the person renting it to already have prior experience. I.E. already own one, so most people at this point tend to bring their own powerchair, since they’re used to driving it and knowing how it works compared to having to learn a completely different chair, oftentimes one that’s not made for their needs.
I've rented a Whill Ci myself multiple times for a family member, when the chairs are in various states of disrepair over time, and I'm just an able bodied adult with a credit card. I'm not in Orlando and I'm at a real medical store and know what I want, so there's that. My relative is completely wheelchair bound, so we have to rent from time to time.

You don't have to rent wheelchairs in Orlando, and I can see why agencies there are pickier. If OP can't make it through the airport, they probably need to get it locally anyway.
 
Capn Nemo,thank you for that answer. That explains a lot. Now to verify a couple of things. I can walk SHORT distances. I rent a scooter at Disney. I just need help from one end of the terminal to the other. So my solution is going to be renting a van service for all 8 of us. They will drop 2 of us off at Delta and the other 6 off at Suncountry. We can get assistance from our airline. Thanks everyone
 
Capn Nemo,thank you for that answer. That explains a lot. Now to verify a couple of things. I can walk SHORT distances. I rent a scooter at Disney. I just need help from one end of the terminal to the other. So my solution is going to be renting a van service for all 8 of us. They will drop 2 of us off at Delta and the other 6 off at Suncountry. We can get assistance from our airline. Thanks everyone
That sounds like a good plan.

I also am good to walk short distances but use a scooter at Disney. The airports are the part of the trip I dread most. I know it doesn’t seem like a lot of walking when you are able bodied but for some of us the distance between the gates, luggage, ground transport can be so challenging!

My last return trip home was very early and Mears sent a van which was full. I was the only person going Jet Blue and after everyone got out on the lower level the driver told me to stay and drove me to the JB checkin area! I could have kissed him! Gave him an extra nice tip instead lol

Good luck with your trip!
 


Just got home from Florida on Sat. (Not Disney). Flew Delta. Returned car to Alamo. I can not walk without severe pain for very long.Also have COPD. Returned car at Alamo. Walked to terminal and asked for assistance. NO one would help us. No one would call for help, unless we were flying with the airline. We asked people that were not connected to a airline, and they would not help. We put luggage on cart, so I could lean on it. I was in tears. We ended up walking all the way to the Delta counter, where they finally helped us. Had to use inhaler. The next day I woke up and could not walk. It took most of the day moving slowly to get the pain out of my leg. I am retuning to Florida in 3 weeks to go to Disney with my daughters family. We were going to use sunshine flyer, but I can NOT walk that again. My daughter will also need assistance, but flying Suncountry. What can we do. Don’t public places have to help people with disabilities? It’s making me not wanting to go! Help
Conniequeen, I am so sad for you! I had a similar experience (no help with my disability at the airport) and I hoped that my ranting and raving helped. I was on DME, when they still had it, and although they were arriving in one terminal, my airline, Southwest, was over in another terminal. I had been told by the DME office that they'd call over and a Southwest person would come to DME for me with a wheelchair. But unfortunately, that didn't happen. After a very long wait, I only got to Southwest because a bystander took pity on me and brought me themselves. Now I use Uber, which always drops me off right at the Disability check-in outside the Southwest terminal. So unfortunate that the airport doesn't help.
 
I too had the same experience at MCO. I have 2 bad knees and a bad hip. I am fortunate that I can drive to Virginia and take the auto train. I have MY ECV in the back of my SUV and do not have to walk through an airport nor wait for wheelchair assist if taking a connecting flight. (Charlotte is the worst!). So now when I go to Disney, I take the auto train!
 
Just got home from Florida on Sat. (Not Disney). Flew Delta. Returned car to Alamo. I can not walk without severe pain for very long.Also have COPD. Returned car at Alamo. Walked to terminal and asked for assistance. NO one would help us. No one would call for help, unless we were flying with the airline. We asked people that were not connected to a airline, and they would not help. We put luggage on cart, so I could lean on it. I was in tears. We ended up walking all the way to the Delta counter, where they finally helped us. Had to use inhaler. The next day I woke up and could not walk. It took most of the day moving slowly to get the pain out of my leg. I am retuning to Florida in 3 weeks to go to Disney with my daughters family. We were going to use sunshine flyer, but I can NOT walk that again. My daughter will also need assistance, but flying Suncountry. What can we do. Don’t public places have to help people with disabilities? It’s making me not wanting to go! Help
Do you use an ECV or other assistance at home? Medical equipment flies free, so you could bring whatever you use at home with you.
Conniequeen, I am so sad for you! I had a similar experience (no help with my disability at the airport) and I hoped that my ranting and raving helped. I was on DME, when they still had it, and although they were arriving in one terminal, my airline, Southwest, was over in another terminal. I had been told by the DME office that they'd call over and a Southwest person would come to DME for me with a wheelchair. But unfortunately, that didn't happen. After a very long wait, I only got to Southwest because a bystander took pity on me and brought me themselves. Now I use Uber, which always drops me off right at the Disability check-in outside the Southwest terminal. So unfortunate that the airport doesn't help.
I believe it is the airline, not the airport, that offers the assistance? How did the bystander get you to the terminal, btw?
 
Do you use an ECV or other assistance at home? Medical equipment flies free, so you could bring whatever you use at home with you.

I believe it is the airline, not the airport, that offers the assistance? How did the bystander get you to the terminal, btw?
He went and found a wheelchair that was sitting around-sometimes people get wheelchair assistance, then at some point the wheelchair just gets abandoned, luckily for people like me. I think this was a worker of some type (not a wheelchair attendant) on break, with a good heart. He walked kind of fast, but I got there!
 
I have found that you can't rely on other people or companies to give you the help that you need. As DisneyOma said, medical equipment flies free. So if you have a family member that can push you, bring a wheelchair, if not then rent and bring an ECV. They have small ones that can break down to make it easier.
 
You can also plan to make use of the skycaps outside the doors. For the cost of a tip, you can check your bags with them and they will call for your wheelchair.

At MCO, do expect a wait for a wheelchair pusher to get to you... possibly a considerable wait. And know that they will take passengers in order of flight departure/boarding time… not necessarily first come, first served. (That’s true at most airports, though) You still wanna give yourself a hefty time buffer though, because they are spread pretty thin.

Both on the day we arrived & the morning we left, we noticed that a lot of the porters were pushing two chairs at a time. 😲 The day we left, the porter told my husband that if he was willing to push me, we could tag along with him thru the separate TSA line they go thru. That porter was pushing 2 chairs himself.
I will say he was actually one of the best, most efficient and organized helpers I’ve ever seen. He managed (juggled) the carryon stuff from the 3 of us with wheelchairs, as well as helping keep my husband’s & my belongings grouped together to go thru x-ray. He got the chairs screened and thru in a blink, and had corralled everyones’ belongings on the other side so nothing was left unattended while we all were screened. That dude was a dynamo! I was never able to get his name. I tried asking him at one point, but he didn’t hear me... it was just so, so busy— and it wasnt even 6 in the morning. On a Sunday!

For Delta Airlines— save this number in your phone: (404) 209-3434. That is Delta’s dedicated help line for passengers with disabilities. It is answered by real people 24 hrs a day, 7 days a week. If you need assistance at any point and can’t seem to get it from the airport personnel you’re dealing with, call them… they are able to call the airport directly and get appropriate helpers to you wherever you are.

I’ve had to do just that in Seattle when they “parked” me in a little corral & seemingly forgot about me. I couldn’t seem to get the attention of anyone capable of figuring out how to help me… so needing to use the restroom badly, and fearing that I was going to miss my flight— finally, in desperation, I called that number and like magic, I had a Prospect supervisor (co. that provides the wheelchair porters), airport security (can’t remember if they were Sea-Tac police or TSA), and a couple Delta reps falling all over themselves trying to get me taken care of. All of a sudden, people were coming out of the woodwork to assist me.
I got to my flight on time with a supervisor pushing my chair and a Delta manager-of-something as my personal escort. I kinda wish I had called a lot sooner, because I was getting the VIP treatment and it would’ve been interesting to see what other perks they would’ve offered— the Delta rep mentioned going to the Sky Club… but I didn’t have time. 🫤

One last tip— airports all still seem to have the white courtesy phones peppered throughout. I’ve even heard pages going out over the PA: “Mr So&So, please go to a white courtesy phone" several times in my recent travels. I think most of us barely think of public phones anymore, since we generally always have out personal phone right in our pocket or handbag.

Anyway, those phones put you through directly to the airport operator, who of course would be able to summon assistance for you from the appropriate personnel even if the actual ticket counter for your chosen airline is still seemingly a mile away.
 
Capn Nemo,thank you for that answer. That explains a lot. Now to verify a couple of things. I can walk SHORT distances. I rent a scooter at Disney. I just need help from one end of the terminal to the other. So my solution is going to be renting a van service for all 8 of us. They will drop 2 of us off at Delta and the other 6 off at Suncountry. We can get assistance from our airline. Thanks everyone
This sounds like it’s a permanent situation. Maybe you should consider purchasing a foldable electric wheelchair which is great for traveling. After renting an ECV for three vacations will be about the cost of purchasing your own. I can’t walk very far without pain. Without my EWC, I wouldn’t be able to go anywhere without one. If a new one is not in your budget, purchase a used one. Believe me, you’ll be so much happier.
 
Please don't count on the white courtesy phones. We have tried using them numerous times at MCO. We take Mears (used to be Magical Express and now Mears Connect) arriving from resort to airport. The person on the other end states "if I can get someone to pick up the phone" and then you wait on hold. We have been stuck numerous times. Last trip (July, 2022) person dragged luggage and pushed my own wheelchair to the Delta area. Asked a Delta representative for help, he told us to wait "over there". We waited and waited. He was trying to clear a continuous line at checking in. It was so bad, not sure we will travel again. It was very stressful - yes tears flowed.
 
When my family traveled by air in June 2022, we saw some things we had not seen before, likely due to staffing issues

- people who asked for wheelchair assistance at the airline check in desk were just given a wheelchair and had to find or provide someone to push it themselves. One boy, who looked about 10, was pushing his grandma and several strangers in the check in line volunteered to push someone who needed help

- a long line of people in wheelchairs were parked next to the departure gate and just left there more than 30 minutes before boarding
 
When my family traveled by air in June 2022, we saw some things we had not seen before, likely due to staffing issues

- people who asked for wheelchair assistance at the airline check in desk were just given a wheelchair and had to find or provide someone to push it themselves. One boy, who looked about 10, was pushing his grandma and several strangers in the check in line volunteered to push someone who needed help

- a long line of people in wheelchairs were parked next to the departure gate and just left there more than 30 minutes before boarding
My mom had to get someone to help at the airport last spring - some nice guy pushed her from the gate to the (wrong) parking area. She was too embarrassed to say that it was the wrong place though, so I had to go find her. :)

You are supposed to get to the gate ahead of time, and a 30 minute wait would be appropriate, IMO. If people get there at the last minute, that plane is not going to leave on time.
 
My mom had to get someone to help at the airport last spring - some nice guy pushed her from the gate to the (wrong) parking area. She was too embarrassed to say that it was the wrong place though, so I had to go find her. :)

You are supposed to get to the gate ahead of time, and a 30 minute wait would be appropriate, IMO. If people get there at the last minute, that plane is not going to leave on time.
I meant 30 minutes before the gate was staffed, not 30 minutes before boarding.
 
I meant 30 minutes before the gate was staffed, not 30 minutes before boarding.
That's a little different, and sucks to have to wait, but in all honesty, if you can't be left alone safely in public for an hour or two, perhaps travelling with a companion is a better option. I know that limits a person's ability to travel, but there's also a level of personal responsibility, isn't there? My mom sat at the departure terminal for 2 hours, (plane delayed) and she texted me her butt was numb, and I told her to stand up (she can stand and walk, just not across an entire airport) and move a bit. She was afraid people would think she was faking and didn't need wheelchair assistance. When she didn't get assistance from the arrival terminal to the ground transport exit she panicked as well. We had a long talk later about her issues and her lack of independence. She won't fly alone (I tried to talk her into getting an ECV) so I either have to fly down to her, or she will get a companion to fly with her (most likely her best friend) if she ever comes back up here.
 
On one of our flights on United Airlines, just at the start of the pandemic, the pilot pushed me to the next gate because there were so many passengers in wheelchairs and not enough staff to help. Believe it or not, I know a woman who brags about using airline wheelchair service saying “It’s the only way to travel.” Makes me wonder how many people abuse this service. 🙄
 

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