public transit fail
Jan. 4th, 2010 04:15 pm(xposted to
accessibility_fail; apologies to those who are seeing it twice)
The town I live in has a fairly decent public transportation system (which is even accessible, except for the times when they use authentic red London double-decker buses; and you can get a disabled pass that basically gives you free rides) but it's designed around the university, which means that getting from one place to another, when neither of them is near the university, is not always easy.
(this is not the fail. It's annoying, but not fail.)
I have a weekly appointment Fridays at 3pm. Because of the way routes are laid out, I would need to catch a bus at 1:45, ride it for about ten minutes, wait half an hour to transfer to a connecting route, ride it for about five minutes, and be there over half an hour before my appointment. Or else take the 1:45 bus to the university, hope it isn't late, go to the other bus terminal at the university, and pick up the other bus, still with the same result. Seriously, I could walk* there faster; it takes less than an hour. A rather miserable less-than-hour if it's cold and rainy, but it's not like the waiting times would be any better.
(* for definitions of walk that translate to using my wheelchair. I think of traveling by wheelchair (without additional vehicles such as being in a van) as walking, but I often confuse people when I say it.)
Now. The place where I lives has a paratransit service. Their official website says, and I quote:
They are a curb-to-curb service, with the usual fun about how you have to give a 20-minute window (i.e. be available 10 minutes before and after the scheduled time) but the bus will only wait 3 minutes, etc. But basically, it looks like a thing where you can use it if you're disabled, right?
...sort of.
It turns out, according to the person I spoke to in the process of requesting an application, that you can use it only if a) you are disabled, and b) the nature of the disability means that you cannot use any other public transportation service, including the aforementioned bus system.
WTFFF.
(and even more annoyingly: the fare for the bus service is free with a disabled pass, and otherwise $1 per trip; the paratransit is $2.)
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The town I live in has a fairly decent public transportation system (which is even accessible, except for the times when they use authentic red London double-decker buses; and you can get a disabled pass that basically gives you free rides) but it's designed around the university, which means that getting from one place to another, when neither of them is near the university, is not always easy.
(this is not the fail. It's annoying, but not fail.)
I have a weekly appointment Fridays at 3pm. Because of the way routes are laid out, I would need to catch a bus at 1:45, ride it for about ten minutes, wait half an hour to transfer to a connecting route, ride it for about five minutes, and be there over half an hour before my appointment. Or else take the 1:45 bus to the university, hope it isn't late, go to the other bus terminal at the university, and pick up the other bus, still with the same result. Seriously, I could walk* there faster; it takes less than an hour. A rather miserable less-than-hour if it's cold and rainy, but it's not like the waiting times would be any better.
(* for definitions of walk that translate to using my wheelchair. I think of traveling by wheelchair (without additional vehicles such as being in a van) as walking, but I often confuse people when I say it.)
Now. The place where I lives has a paratransit service. Their official website says, and I quote:
Who May Use This Service?
* Customers who qualify under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990
* Disabled customers may be accompanied by a personal attendant at no extra charge when required.
* One unregistered companion may accompany a registered customer, and must pay the 1-way fare.
They are a curb-to-curb service, with the usual fun about how you have to give a 20-minute window (i.e. be available 10 minutes before and after the scheduled time) but the bus will only wait 3 minutes, etc. But basically, it looks like a thing where you can use it if you're disabled, right?
...sort of.
It turns out, according to the person I spoke to in the process of requesting an application, that you can use it only if a) you are disabled, and b) the nature of the disability means that you cannot use any other public transportation service, including the aforementioned bus system.
WTFFF.
(and even more annoyingly: the fare for the bus service is free with a disabled pass, and otherwise $1 per trip; the paratransit is $2.)