RATP boss Jean Castex says he is “fully available” to work on the accessibility of the metro

RATP boss Jean Castex says he is “fully available” to work on the accessibility of the metro
RATP boss Jean Castex says he is “fully available” to work on the accessibility of the Paris metro

Jean Castex said he was “fully available” to work on making the metro accessible to people with reduced mobility. However, he warns that such an operation “will take time and money”.

The CEO of the RATP Jean Castex said, this Wednesday, October 8, that he was “fully available” to work on making the Paris metro accessible to people with reduced mobility, as Valérie Pécresse wants, but “it will take time and effort.” ‘money,’ he warned.

“When the first important law on universal accessibility in 2005 was promulgated (…) the direction that was taken for people in wheelchairs was to make the surface network fully accessible,” indicated the former Prime Minister, during his hearing at the National Assembly for his reappointment at the head of the RATP, validated Wednesday by the deputies.

A long-term objective

“The historic metro is unfortunately not accessible to these people (…) but there is still the surface network,” underlined the former Prime Minister.

He recalled the work undertaken before the Olympics to upgrade bus stops, so that they are at the right height to guarantee boarding vehicles.

But “our fellow citizens with disabilities (…) suffer even more from an overloaded network”, recognized Jean Castex, insisting on the need to improve the bus service which “loses too many customers because it will slower and slower in the city.

The accessibility of the metro, “this old, convoluted network, with narrow corridors”, is a long-term objective and therefore “it is necessary at all costs that everything which is already supposed to be accessible should be accessible quickly and more”, he said. he declared.

A cost of 15 to 20 billion euros

Valérie Pécresse, president of the Île-de- region, who also chairs the transport organizing authority Ile-de-France Mobilités (IDFM), announced during the Paralympic Games her intention to launch the metro accessibility project , a black spot in Parisian transport for people with reduced mobility.

She estimated that this would cost between 15 and 20 billion euros, an amount confirmed by Jean Castex, over a period of 20 years. “Technically, it’s cotton,” added the RATP boss.

“We know, for example, that there are stations, I tell you, where we cannot lower an elevator. There are not many, but there are some,” he warned .

Like Valérie Pécresse, he called for starting this project with line 6, the only line where a study has already been carried out, for a cost of work estimated between 600 and 800 million euros.

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