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Old 10-18-2007, 03:29 PM #41
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Question from a Southern suburbanite: What is Access-a-ride?
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Old 10-18-2007, 10:46 PM #42
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Hi Susan:

Access-a-ride is a kind of bus door to door service for people who can't take trains and subways. It's called by various names in different cities. In California it's called Get A Lift.

One has to fill out an application, they then arrange an appointment for you. On that day, the bus picks you up (you are responsible for the fare, back and forth, it's 2 bucks each way, for Access-a-ride here in the 5 boros including NYC).

Then the bus brings you to the Access-a-ride center where you are interviewed by a physician, made to walk back and forth 10 times over a carpet, then you are sent into a room to be interviewed by a psychiatirst. (this is a fairly new development), Started here (the psychiatrist part of the exam) within the last year. The psychiatrist asks you all kinds of questions.

So many people apply for Access-a-ride, they don't accept everybody. I got it 10 years ago. I am re-evaluated every two years or so.

But, when it works (like if you have a 10 o'clock pick up, and they show up on time or even 10 minutes late), you only pay $2.00 and you go where you have to go. Then, at an appointed time, they come and pick you up and drop you off right in front of your door. You really can't beat that for $4.00 (that's the whole fare for the going and returning. Door to door service, in all kind of weather. There's no beating this (when it works). But when they leave you stranded till 1 .am. in Staten Island,) like they did to me and Alan about 6 years ago, well we made it our business to never get an appointment after 9 p.m. We are just afraid to be stranded.

So we do all of our appointments, visiting people, whatever we have to do, well we do it up to 8 p.m in the evening. The latest appointment time for a return trip would be 8:30 p.m. Maybe even 9 p.m. but no later.

And people mistakenly think you have to be disabled to use this service, and only go to doctor's appointments. I must have told my friend Esther a million times. "Apply for it", you can go anywhere in the 5 boros", and she would say "But I want to go to the Staten Island Mall, to Applebees", and I would say "I've already told you, they take you ANYWHERE you need to go for only $2.00". She still thinks she can only go to doctor visits.

Sigh.....................

Maybe someday she'll get it.

My son Frank was signed up (in California) for the Get a Lift program, but he cancelled it because they never came on time.

That's the one bad thing about these Reduced fair programs. YOu really can't depend on them. They give the drivers something like 5 minutes to get from one place and then drive clear across town to pick up the next party.

Oh, once, on Christmas Eve, I was in Staten Island and we had just finished dinner, and Alan and I were playing poker with my whole family. This was about 5 years ago. We were scheduled for a 9 p.m. pick up. We were in the middle of playing poker, and I had a winning hand and the doorbell rings and it's the Acess-a-ride driver (they are actually forbidden to ring doorbells), but this guy came at 8 p.m. Everybody looked at me. Now I was within my rights to let him wait a full hour for us. But I went down and there were 6 other people on the bus. Could I make them wait outside in winter from 8 pm until 9 p.m.???? Of course not. So I just folded my hand and Alan and I had to go.

That was the last time we went anyplace on Christmas.

You really can't depend on this system, but it's all we really have.

Melody
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Old 10-19-2007, 07:15 PM #43
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Thanks. I have never heard of anything like this in Atlanta. We tend to be behind the times here. Haven't really accepted the fact that we are a big city.
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Old 10-19-2007, 07:38 PM #44
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Susan:

You have the MARTA system in Atlanta. You use a Breeze Card to get on buses and subways, right?? We have the Metro Card.

The big difference between my Access-a-ride service and Atlanta's paratransit service is....you can only go the same route as the bus or the subway.

I just got this info off of the MARTA website.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Paratransit service

In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, MARTA provides paratransit for those persons defined as disabled by the ADA. MARTA uses special lift equipped vehicles for this service and can either deliver passengers to their final destination (curb to curb service) or can deliver the passenger to the closest accessible bus stop or rail station (feeder service). In fiscal year 2006 MARTA provided 289,258 paratransit trips.[4]

The average cost to MARTA for providing a one way trip for an individual paratransit passenger is US$31.88.[12] This is much greater than the US$3.50 fare the paratransit rider is required to pay. The Americans with Disabilities Act forbids MARTA from changing a paratransit fare more than twice the normal fixed route fare.

Paratransit is limited to existing rail and bus routes and cannot extend more than a 0.75 mile (1.2 kilometer) radius from any existing route. Paratransit service is only provided during the hours of the fixed route servicing the area. An application for acceptance into the paratransit service is required; reservations are required for all users for each trip.
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From what I'm reading, a paratransit rider can only go the same place as the bus or subway. My Access-a ride takes me door to door wherever I have to go in the 5 boros. And I pay $2.00 each way,and your Atlanta rider pays $3.75 each way. Wow, that's a big difference!!!

Hey, I'm learning all about the south. lol
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Old 10-20-2007, 10:16 AM #45
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Its nice they at least have that. I could not live without my car. I have it serviced and have to get a rental. I'm just used to going when I want and not waiting. Also my anxiety of being trapped I think. I guess it is what you get used to. Melody do you live in the center of NY? Do you get to go to shows a lot?
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Old 10-20-2007, 10:26 AM #46
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Daniella:

If I lived in the center of NYC, sure, I would get to go to shows, but then again, my rent would be $5000 a month. So no, I live in good old Brooklyn, NY. Where that is on the geography map, well, I have no idea. But it was the home of the old Brooklyn Dodgers, Barbara Streisand, and many others.

So I guess we just live where we have to live. Been living here 15 years. Today, because Alan went to the health fair in NYC, I have the whole day to immaculate my house. Didn't have to. It's already immaculated. lol

The b-12 that I take gives me lots of energy. I have a 30 foot living room/dining room. It looks exactly like it did when I first moved in. The lady downstairs is an artist and because I helped set up their computer, she likes to give me stuff. I have all her original artwork on my wall. She does very nice paintings and she makes stuffed pillows, she paints them, and signs them. They are on my couch. Not bad huh???

And I have a ceramic tile floor. No carpeting. Do you know how hard it is to keep this floor clean. My god, you see every little dot. But it's better than carpeting, so I've been told.

Take care and hope you are feeling fine.

Mel
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