Goofyernmost said:
↑
Some of what is being said is true. It is an ADA rule that wheelchair/scooter passengers must be given a ride as quickly as possible.
No, it's not. There is no such requirement. The ADA is an "equalizer" in that those with disabilities are to be given equal access. If there is a three-bus wait for someone who is getting in the bus line, and someone who needs ADA accessibility shows up, Disney CAN require them to wait the three-bus wait.
Goofyernmost said:
↑
If it can be arranged that another bus, or vehicle, will be there to pick them up within a half hour, if I remember correctly, then they can be asked to wait. However, if the buses handicap areas are not in use, other than by able bodied people and they are still refused...well, it won't be pretty. ADA has a lot of muscle in Washington.
Yeah, that's not true either.
I won't argue with you over those points, not that I feel I am necessarily wrong, but because I haven't been in the transportation business now for 2 years, since I retired. It is possible that things have changed since then. Logically, you cannot leave a person in the open, in a chair, exposed to the weather because they cannot easily get out of it and into shelter. That is the reason for the "must be picked up" part of it. It was widely known and marketed by some, that field supervisors that are part of any transit organization, would in all probability be doing their supervision while driving handicapped equipped vans, just for such an event.
I have not kept up with it because...well, why the hell should I, I'm retired, so changes might have been made since I left. However, if a public transit system has unused handicapped areas and the make a person wait for another bus and that person decides to report them to ADA, I, for one, would not like to be the one answering the phone at the bus company when ADA calls.