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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Youcef Bounab

One year before Paralympics, Paris trying to make city more accessible to those with disabilities

Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

With one year to go before Paris hosts the Paralympic Games for the first time, the French capital is faced with a significant challenge: the accessibility of its public transit.

With only one subway line totally accessible out of 16, the city is under pressure to find solutions before the Paralympics start on Aug. 28, 2024.

And both the Games' organizers and wheelchair users such as tennis gold medalist Michael Jeremiasz see the Paris Paralympics as an opportunity to bring about durable change.

“We will remember the opening ceremonies that will be extraordinary and hopefully all the medals of our French Olympic and Paralympic athletes,” Jérémiasz, who won a gold medal for France in the 2008 Beijing Paralympics, said Monday at a news conference marking the one-year countdown to the 2024 Paralympics. “We will remember a big celebration. In my opinion, that’s not enough. ... It’s great but it doesn’t last. Afterwards, life and the constraints of daily life take over.”

Andrew Parsons, president of the International Paralympic Committee, said in an interview with The Associated Press that “we don’t do anything in the city thinking only about the games operations, but also about how the city will look like in the future."

In April, President Emmanuel Macron announced 1.5 billion euros in funding to make public spaces across the country more accessible. The announcement came days after the Council of Europe, the continent’s leading human rights body, found France in violation of a European treaty on social and economic rights, stating failures toward people with disabilities.

Since Paris was awarded hosting rights for the 2024 Olympics and Paralympics, the city has committed 125 million euros to make itself more accessible. But for people with disabilities, Paris still has a long way to go.

Frustratingly for some, most of the accessibility efforts in Paris will not target the metro system, the city’s most frequented public transport.

“It’s a legislation issue as well — that you have to make the whole line accessible — and this is not possible due to the cost,'' Parsons said. ‘’But the solution is to invest on the buses and the taxis and on the on-the-ground system.”

Organizers and authorities pledged that up to 200 shuttle buses will be accessible to people who use wheelchairs, in addition to up to 1,000 accessible taxis by the time the games start.

The Paris Paralympic Games will run from Aug. 28-Sept. 8, 2024, kicking off 17 days after the Paris Olympics’ closing ceremony. The Paralympics competition will bring together 4,400 athletes from 180 countries to compete in 549 events and 22 sports. Many sports will take place in venues near some iconic landmarks like the Eiffel Tower, Versailles, and the Grand Palais.

For the first time, the Paralympics’ opening ceremony will also be held outside of a sports venue and will take place in the capital’s center, on the Champs-Elysées boulevard and Place de la Concorde.

But for many the legacy that the games should bring about is what’s most relevant.

The city aims to sell 2.8 million tickets to break London’s 2012 Summer Paralympics’ record of 2.7 million tickets sold. Parsons said half of the tickets will cost 25 euros or less, with the hopes of drawing families and people in groups.

“The more we bring families with their kids, the more the change in perception affects not only the parent but also the kid,'' Parsons said. ‘’We are investing in the future generations of this country, the future decision-makers.”

Tony Estanguet, the Paris 2024 organizing committee president, told the AP: “We need to reduce discrimination. We need to find solutions to improve transport, to improve accommodation, to improve access to employment, to improve the daily lives of people with disabilities.”

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Jeffrey Schaeffer contributed to this report.

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