Skip to main content

Transit apps ‘exclude most disabled users’, experts say

Nearly three-quarters of disabled customers experience barriers on more than a quarter of transport-related websites, according to experts.
By Ben Spencer March 13, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Transit solutions need to 'build in accessibility from the outset' (© Alf Ribeiro | Dreamstime.com)

The group at the ITS (UK) Inclusive Mobility Forum say people who find it uncomfortable - or even impossible - to use transport-related apps or websites end up paying more for travel or miss out completely on using transport solutions. 

The forum argued that this does not make financial sense, since businesses lose around £2 billion by ignoring them.

It urged transport providers to consider people with disabilities and to seriously think about offering alternatives. 

Kris Beuret, chair of the ITS (UK) forum, says: “The industry does great things, but would do so much more if designers always thought first about accessibility and created intuitive, user-friendly solutions, building accessibility from the outset.”

Active training is already proving successful, as results from one target group in Yorkshire show that informal sessions led to 30% of people changing their travel patterns with 20% even feeling able to make additional trips.
 
Beuret concluded: “There are many different forms of disabilities so it’s very challenging to deliver for everyone. Hidden disabilities are very hard to design for and I believe private companies need more public sector support for innovative product development.”

Related Content

  • March 1, 2023
    “For a city to be loveable, the car has to be a guest”: EmpowerWISM winner Kari Anne Solfjeld Eid
    Kari Anne Solfjeld Eid, founder of e-cargo bike subscription service Whee!, has won the Empower Women in Shared Mobility 2023 programme. She tells Adam Hill how to make cities loveable…
  • February 6, 2020
    MaaS by any other name
    Has the roll-out of Mobility as a Service stalled - or could it just be that multimodal travel is simply happening under a variety of different names?
  • May 30, 2013
    Communication: the future of machine vision
    Jason Barnes asks leading machine vision industry figures what they consider to be the educational barriers to the technology’s increased uptake by the ITS sector. The recent rush by some organisations within the ITS sector to associate themselves with the term ‘machine vision’ underlines just how important the technology has become in a relatively short space of time. However, despite the technology having been applied in certain traffic management applications for some years, there remains a significant s
  • January 19, 2012
    ITS industry needs more effort to get to the future
    Eric Sampson, visiting professor at Newcastle University and City University London and ambassador for ITS-UK, provides a retrospective on the last couple of decades and takes a look at what the ITS industry still needs to do to get to where it needs to be