Transport for London (TfL) is encouraging school children across the capital to express their creative talents and design a piece of artwork to mark the start of Priority Seating Week.
TfL provides priority seating to help customers, including those with non-visible conditions, parents with infants as well as older people to travel more safely and comfortably. There are designated priority seats in every train and tram carriage and on buses. They are normally found close to doors and should be clearly signposted.
The art competition*, which is open to children aged six to 14, calls for budding artists to submit photographs of an artwork they have created depicting why it is important for people to offer seats to people who need them. Children have until 17 November to apply, and entries will be judged by TfL’s Independent Disability Advisory Group. Three lucky winners will see their artwork displayed on London’s transport network and will receive tickets for a family of four to a Merlin Entertainments attraction in London, and three runners up will receive return tickets for a family of four for the IFS Cloud Cable Car.
TfL will also be marking the week by trialling new signage and designs on DLR trains, to highlight priority seat locations and encourage people to look up and offer their seat. This is in addition to the ongoing ‘Access DLR’ accessibility assistance trial** for customers who would like additional travel support on their journey.
TfL’s customer inclusion plan, Equity in Motion, which was published in February, set out more than 80 commitments to make London a fairer and more accessible and inclusive city. One of these commitments was to conduct research into priority seating with a panel of disabled customers, and this was undertaken earlier this year.
The research looked at how likely people are to get a priority seat if they need one and showed that many of those who need a seat do get one. It also revealed that although many customers are doing the right thing and offering their seat, it is not always clear when someone needs a priority seat and people are not always paying attention to their surroundings to notice if there is someone in need of a seat. Separate research for the Docklands Light Railway (DLR) also showed that many people were unaware of the priority seating, which are not visually distinctive from other seating.
TfL’s Priority Seating Week aims to help tackle this issue by raising awareness of the availability of priority seating across the public transport network and the importance of customers giving up their seat to other passengers who may be in a greater need.
There will be engagement activity throughout the week in stations and new posters across the transport network, as well as posts on social media.
Station staff on the Elizabeth line will promote TfL’s ‘Please offer me a seat’ badge to make travelling easier and more comfortable for people with a range of needs and conditions who find it difficult to stand for the duration of their journeys.
Since its launch in 2017, more than 140,000 ‘Please offer me a seat’ badges have been issued to disabled people and those with non-visible conditions. TfL has also issued more than 800,000 ‘Baby on board’ badges in the last eight years alone following its launch in 2005. On the DLR network, customers can for the first time find both badges at staffed stations*** and the London City Airport information centre.
Seb Dance, Deputy Mayor for Transport, said: “Making the public transport network accessible for all is a top priority for the Mayor, and Londoners can play their part by being aware of who’s around them and offering their seat to those who need it, bearing in mind that not all disabilities are visible.
“I’m pleased to see TfL taking an innovative approach this Priority Seating Week, trialling new signage designs on DLR trains which will clearly highlight priority seats.”