4/31
Home / Albums / Atlanta, Fall 1989 /

ADAPT (513)

ADAPT (513).JPG ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)ADAPT (503)ThumbnailsADAPT (499)

FRI. SEPTEMBER 29, 1989 The Atlanta Journal and Constitution

[Headline] ADAPT: ‘Militant Group' Takes on the Mainstream

Disabled Protesters Tired of ‘Lousy Way to Live’

By Pat Burson, staff writer

Sallie Bach said she used to look at people with disabilities “like they were nothing.“

“When you're able to walk, you see people like this and you stand up and laugh at them. l know. l did it," said the 50-year-old Chicago woman, a waitress for 21 years until she became physically disabled after jumping from a third-floor window to escape an apartment fire.

“l know what it feels like now," she said. “Now I understand.“

Ms. Bach joined more than 100 other disabled and non-disabled people who are members of American Disabled for Accessible Transportation, or ADAPT, as they blockaded a federal office tower and the Greyhound bus station in Atlanta this week to call attention to their demands that wheelchair lifts be installed on all new buses purchased with federal dollars.

ADAPT, based in Denver, promotes non discriminatory, mainline public transit system that are accessible to people who use wheelchairs.

This week's protests were planned to coincide with the American Public Transit Association‘s (APTA) annual convention ADAPT has held similar protests in Denver, San Francisco, Cincinnati and Montreal, trying to persuade APTA members to support total accessibility of public transit systems.

The transit group and ADAPT differ on the federal government's role in mandating access to public transportation. APTA agrees that transit systems should make their buses and trains accessible, but the group believes local government not Washington, should decide.

Whether or not members of the disabled community agree with ADAPT's more radical tactics, they applaud its members unceasing demand for access.

“They are a militant group, and l think their militancy had been imposed upon them," said Jay W. Brill, a longtime activist for disability rights and manager of the Initiative on Technology, Disability and Post-Secondary Education at the American Council on Education in Washington.

"There's a point where the community [of disabled people] becomes so frustrated with transit authorities, and a door opens wide for ADAPT," said Mr.Brill.

ADAPT founder Wade E. Blank, a 48-year-old minister with shoulder-length blond hair, said he got the idea to start the group when

he worked as a nursing home orderly. "l said to myself, 'What a lousy way to live your life," he said Wednesday, standing behind a police barricade as 25 fellow protesters at the Greyhound station were loaded onto a lift-equipped bus by police.

Co-founder Michael Auberger describes ADAPT as “a fringe group‘ that has become mainstream."

“It attracts the person who has been within the system and tired of it and the person who is locked out of the system,... somebody who's really disabled, on a fixed income and needs to use public transportation."

The organization, formed in 1983, has about 1,800 members and 33 local chapters.

As protesters tried to close down the Richard B. Russell Federal Building this week, linking arms and wheelchairs at the tower's
main doors and elevators, some compared the demonstration to those during the civil rights movement of a quarter-century ago.

"The civil rights movement started because of busing" said Jerry Eubanks, a 31-year-old-dispatcher for the Chicago Sanitation

Department, whose legs were amputated below the knee after a train accident. “We just want the right to ride the bus."

0 comments