[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 14, Volume 4]
[Revised as of January 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 14CFR382.40]

[Page 423-424]
 
                     TITLE 14--AERONAUTICS AND SPACE
 
   CHAPTER II--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION 
                         (AVIATION PROCEEDINGS)
 
PART 382--NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF DISABILITY IN AIR TRAVEL--Table of Contents
 
                  Subpart C--Requirements for Services
 
Sec. 382.40  Boarding assistance for small aircraft.

    (a) Paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section apply to air carriers 
conducting passenger operations with aircraft having 19-30 seat capacity 
at airports with 10,000 or more annual enplanements.
    (b) Carriers shall, in cooperation with the airports they serve, 
provide boarding assistance to individuals with disabilities using 
mechanical lifts, ramps, or other suitable devices that do not require 
employees to lift or carry passengers up stairs.
    (c)(1) Each carrier shall negotiate in good faith with the airport 
operator at each airport concerning the acquisition and use of boarding 
assistance devices. The carrier(s) and the airport operator shall, by no 
later than September 2, 1997, sign a written agreement allocating 
responsibility for meeting the boarding assistance requirements of this 
section between or among the parties. The agreement shall be made 
available, on request, to representatives of the Department of 
Transportation.
    (2) The agreement shall provide that all actions necessary to ensure 
accessible boarding for passengers with disabilities are completed as 
soon as practicable, but no later than December 2, 1998 at large and 
medium commercial service hub airports (those with 1,200,000 or more 
annual enplanements); December 2, 1999 for small commercial service hub 
airports (those with between 250,000 and 1,199,999 annual enplanements); 
or December 4, 2000 for non-hub commercial service primary airports 
(those with between 10,000 and 249,999 annual enplanements) . All air 
carriers and airport operators involved are jointly responsible for the 
timely and complete implementation of the agreement.
    (3) Under the agreement, carriers may require that passengers 
wishing to receive boarding assistance requiring the use of a lift for a 
flight using a 19-30 seat aircraft check in for the flight one hour 
before the scheduled departure time for the flight. If the passenger 
checks in after this time, the carrier shall nonetheless provide the 
boarding assistance by lift if it can do so by making a reasonable 
effort, without delaying the flight.
    (4) Boarding assistance under the agreement is not required in the 
following situations:
    (i) Access to aircraft with a capacity of fewer than 19 or more than 
30 seats;
    (ii) Access to float planes;
    (iii) Access to the following 19-seat capacity aircraft models: the 
Fairchild Metro, the Jetstream 31, and the Beech 1900 (C and D models);
    (iv) Access to any other 19-seat aircraft model determined by the 
Department of Transportation to be unsuitable for boarding assistance by 
lift on the basis of a significant risk of serious damage to the 
aircraft or the presence of internal barriers that preclude passengers 
who use a boarding or aisle chair to reach a non-exit row seat.
    (5) When boarding assistance is not required to be provided under 
paragraph (c)(4) of this section, or cannot be provided as required by 
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section for reasons beyond the control of 
the parties to the agreement (e.g., because of mechanical problems with 
a lift), boarding assistance shall be provided by any available means to 
which the passenger consents, except hand-carrying as defined in 
Sec. 382.39(a)(2) of this part.
    (6) The agreement shall ensure that all lifts and other 
accessibility equipment are maintained in proper working condition.
    (d)(1) The training of carrier personnel required by Sec. 382.61 
shall include, for those personnel involved in providing boarding 
assistance, training to proficiency in the use of the boarding 
assistance equipment used by the carrier and appropriate boarding 
assistance procedures that safeguard the safety and dignity of 
passengers.

[[Page 424]]

    (2) Carriers who do not operate aircraft with more than a 19-seat 
capacity shall ensure that those personnel involved in providing 
boarding assistance are trained to proficiency in the use of the 
boarding assistance equipment used by the carrier and appropriate 
boarding assistance procedures that safeguard the safety and dignity of 
passengers.

[Amdt. 6, 61 FR 56423, Nov. 1, 1996]