1380/1847
Home / Albums /

ADAPT (269)

ADAPT (269).JPG ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)ADAPT (271)ThumbnailsADAPT (268)

The Cincinnati Post Tuesday, May 20, 1986

Lighthouse logo of Scripps Howard and the motto: "Give light and the people will find their own way."

Editor Paul F. Knue, Editorial Page Editor
Claudia Winkler, Managing Editor J. Stephen Fagan, Associate Editor James L. Adams

125 East Court Street, Cincinnati. OH 45202 (513)352-2000

Editorials

Title: Buses and the disabled

Shades of the civil rights movement returned to Cincinnati yesterday when members of ADAPT, which stands for American Disabled for Accessible Public Transportation, interfered with the operation of Queen City Metro buses. One latched onto a wheel well, and two others boarded and refused to leave.

The protesters say members of the American Public Transit Association, who are meeting here this week, are moving slowly or not at all toward making all buses and trains fully accessible for the handicapped. They point to Metro, which has many buses without wheelchair lifts and 87 with lifts that it refuses to operate, as a microcosm of the problem nationwide.

Some may condemn the protesters’ tactics of interrupting normal transit service, albeit by relatively non-violent means. The larger question, however, is whether the transit systems are going out of their way to leave the handicapped at curbside. That's certainly not the case with Metro.

Metro has contracted with a private company to provide door-to-door (more accurately, curb-to-curb) service for the handicapped within Cincinnati. The system isn't perfect, but it is growing. Complaints abounds that scheduling the Access vans is difficult, and Metro has failed to meet a five-year goal of providing van service to all of Hamilton County, says general manager Tony Kouneski.

The problem, here and elsewhere, is one of money. ADAPT wants the lifts as well as the door-to-door service. It’s tough to have it both ways, especially since federal dollars for mass transit have been cut almost 25 percent by the Reagan administration. States have been hard-pressed to fill that gap, and a sales tax increase for Metro failed miserably in 1980.

Kouneski says if Metro did, indeed, have an extra $350,000 for operating and maintaining the 87 wheelchair lifts, the money would be better spent on door-to-door service. That's a decision that groups such as the Greater Cincinnati Coalition of People With Disabilities and Metro's own advisory council for the handicapped should help make and implement.

Members of national groups such as ADAPT, meanwhile, have made their point. They should now turn their efforts to such things as legal parades and peaceful picketing. Instead of continuing their Cincinnati protest, they should devote their energies to lobbying Washington and the legislatures to fund their full-access plan before someone is seriously injured.

0 comments