Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

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Joe Guy
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Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Joe Guy »

Too fat to fly? Stranded Frenchman's long ordeal

By DANICA KIRKA, Associated Press
Updated 2:38 pm, Wednesday, November 20, 2013

LONDON (AP) — He's been turned down by planes, trains and even a cruise ship in his quest to return home — and his family says it's because he has been deemed too fat to travel.

Now Frenchman Kevin Chenais' long and fitful journey is coming to an end.

Chenais, who weighs 500 pounds (230 kilograms), says he has been repeatedly refused transport over the past two weeks as he sought to get home to France from the United States. P&O Ferries finally offered to take him in an ambulance across the English Channel on Wednesday, the final hurdle keeping him from his home near the Swiss border.

"It's terrible. It's discrimination. It was very hard, tiring and a big waste of money for my parents," the 22-year-old told RTL radio on Wednesday.

Slumped over in his mobility scooter, he said he was exhausted just before being loaded into the ambulance.

Chenais' mother was outraged by the treatment her son allegedly received, saying he was discriminated against because of his weight.

"It's not the fault of my son to be big. He has a genetic illness," Christina Chenais said. "We are very happy to go home after this long, distressing and traumatic situation."

The odyssey began when British Airways refused to honor his return ticket from the United States, where he spent months receiving medical care for a hormone imbalance.

"When we talked about this problem with British Airways that Kevin was too fat ... (they said) abandon any intention of coming back to France," Kevin's father, Rene, told RTL Radio. "From the fact of his incapacity, his obesity, he was not considered to be a normal being, but more like a problem."

BA acknowledges that it refused to let Chenais board the plane, but said confidentiality rules prevent it from saying why. BA insisted that it does not discriminate against customers for any reason and that the airline provides the option of an extra seat to people who contact them with concerns about seat width.

"We respect the privacy of the customer so cannot comment on any changes in circumstance between arrival and departure dates," the company said in a statement. British Airways declined to say what the changes in circumstance had been.

Chenais said Carnival Cruises also rejected his request for a cabin on a trans-Atlantic voyage. The company declined to comment.

Virgin Atlantic airlines stepped in to fly him to London, he said. The company refused to comment on the topic to The Associated Press.

From London, Chenais had planned to take the Eurostar train home. But Eurostar refused to allow him on board because of safety rules governing travel through the Channel Tunnel: The high-speed train that connects England to France and Belgium requires all passengers to have the ability to be safely evacuated — and Chenais' obesity-caused lack of mobility made that impossible.

"This is a terrible situation," Eurostar said in a statement. "Our heart goes out to Mr. Chenais and his family who are understandably desperate to return home after being stranded in America."

Eurostar paid for the family's hotel room and worked with P&O to find a solution.

"It's difficult to imagine the frustration that this gentleman has gone through," P&O spokesman Chris Laming said in a statement. "But for us, it's very straightforward, as we are set up to carry people who have medical needs."

The ferry company took Chenais and his family across the English Channel late Wednesday to Calais. From there, the family was driving to the French town of Ferney-Voltaire, 740 kilometers (460 miles) to the southeast.

"I am waiting to see my sisters and the other people in my family," Chenais told RTL radio. "I couldn't have imagined this for us."

source

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Long Run
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Long Run »

Great, now I've got that song stuck in my head. Wait, thanks, now I've got that song stuck in my head.

This situation is another French paradox.

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Joe Guy
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Joe Guy »

Sleep little Long Run do not cry... :D

(edited because that was stupid)
Last edited by Joe Guy on Thu Nov 21, 2013 1:55 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Gob
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Gob »

Would you want to sit next to him on a plane or train?

Hen got lumped next to a fatty on one of our flights recently. He flowed over into her seat.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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Scooter
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Scooter »

the airline provides the option of an extra seat to people who contact them with concerns about seat width
This was clearly an option that the guy refused to exercise. If he was that desperate to get home, then paying double the fare would be a small price to pay, I would think.

But this:
Chenais said Carnival Cruises also rejected his request for a cabin on a trans-Atlantic voyage.
was a WTF moment for me. There are disabled people who travel on cruise ships all the time, surely a cabin adapted for a wheelchair would have a door big enough for him to fit through, etc. Are they afraid his weight would unbalance a lifeboat, or something?
"Hang on while I log in to the James Webb telescope to search the known universe for who the fuck asked you." -- James Fell

rubato
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by rubato »

He may have had other health status issues. 500lb at 22 years old! What a tragedy to lose so much of that part of life.

Yrs,
Rubato

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Long Run
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Long Run »

Joe Guy wrote:Sleep little Long Run do not cry... :D

(edited because that was stupid)
I thought it was funny (but then I suffer from LAD*), and I missed the lullaby.


*lyric association disorder

Big RR
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by Big RR »

Scooter--if he was offered the option of an extra seat (or possibly upgrading to first class) I'd agree with you, but we don't know what BA offered (all we know is that they offer that as an option for "passengers who contact them with concerns about the seat width"). The may not have wanted to carry him because of other concerns, like those raised by the chunnel train and the cruise line. In any event, unless he gained weight while undergoing treatment (and he may have) is seems somewhat disingenuous that the airline would have provided transportation to the US, but not back, when they sold him a roundtrip ticket.

Gob--re sitting next to him, I would imagine he would sit by his parents who were travelling with him and they are the ones who would be inconvenienced.

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MajGenl.Meade
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Re: Once There Was a Way to Get Back Home....

Post by MajGenl.Meade »

Image

Their mistake was to give him a starboard outer cabin.
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts

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