Accessible Transport launchAccessible Transport launch
Paul Deighton - LOCOG Chief Executive: One of our core objectives is to make sure these are everyone's Games.
Mark Todd - ODA Principal Access and Inclusion Officer: What this is all about is trying to ensure that there are accessible transport options available for disabled people, and anybody else who needs accessible travel who are coming to the Olympics and Paralympics, but more than that, what we're really trying to do is change the way transport providers think about accessible travel, so it's seen as part of what they do and also try and change how disabled people think about themselves, so they expect to travel on public transport.
Helen Smith from Norwich: London is somewhere which a lot of people with a disability wouldn't really dare go into. You can't use the tube, the cost of taxi's is extortionate, using a bus is quite frightening.
John Armitt - ODA Chairman: One of the benefits people will say of having had the Olympics in London, is that accessibility to public transport is better and continues to get better for people because of the Olympic Games.
Hugh Summer - ODA Director of Transport: The important thing to recognise is that we aspire to deliver a games that is accessibly inclusive to everyone across the whole of the nation and then leave behind a legacy.
Helen Smith from Norwich: The Olympics is kind of a starting point and I hope from then on we can expand that and make London a really accessible city for anyone with a disability.