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New York is arguably called the \u2018Greatest City\u2019 in the world, and seemingly does everything to maintain its reputation as the \u2018City That Never Sleeps \u2013 unless you have a disability, that is. The City\u2019s Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) is currently proposing cuts to a \u2018taxi on demand pilot\u2019 which has enabled disabled passengers to book same day trips via an App, at the same price as a subway ride. The proposed cuts are scheduled to go into effect on or about August 21, 2023.<\/p>\n
Disability Rights Advocate & Founder of the non-profit, Give Beauty Wings<\/a><\/em>,\u00a0Xian Horn<\/a>\u00a0contends that these cuts will turn the clock back to a former transportation model that made it more difficult for disabled individuals to travel around the City. \u201cTraditionally, with Access a Ride you have to book your ride by phone or app 24-48 hours in advance,\u201d Xian says. \u201cBy phone it could take 45 minutes to get a reservationist and then the process to book can take as long as half an hour. And you must call before 5pm,\u201d she continues. \u201cYou also have to have exact addresses and times and often your pick up time could be two hours before you need to be there and so-called on time performance is up to a half hour late by anyone else\u2019s standard; and once you get in your vehicle, because it is shared, it could take another two or three hours.\u201d Xian recalls one experience where she was picked up at night from the airport in Queens and then having to go pick up a couple who were attending a funeral in Brooklyn. It took her another three hours to get home, which was about the same amount of total time as the flight she had taken from Florida back to New York. \u201cThese experiences are so common, in fact, that it\u2019s nicknamed \u201cStress a Ride,\u201d she adds. In fact, of the 174,000 people signed up for Access A Ride there are only 60,000 active users, which Xian believes is the result of its poor service.\u00a0<\/p>\n According to Assembly Member Rebecca Seawright, who also serves as the NY State Assembly Chair of the People with Disabilities Committee, \u201cThe e-hail access-a-ride pilot program has been a life changing program for people with disabilities to live and work across the city without barriers imposed by inaccessible and expensive buses, trains, and taxi cabs. Expanding the program to include triple the number of participants has changed people\u2019s lives for those who were a part of the pilot program. It is disturbing that in exchange for expanded participation, the new pilot will require riders to pay more out of pocket and caps the number of rides per month\u201d<\/p>\n It is important to remember that when the ADA<\/a> became law in 1990. Apps and ride share programs such as Lyft and Uber did not exist then, since technology was in its infancy stages. Although the traditional transportation model of Access a Ride was created with 1990 technology, it has not since been updated.<\/p>\n The MTA has admitted that traveling by the same-day, e-hail access-a-ride pilot is much cheaper per ride than the blue and white van carriers. (The average cost of e-hail per trip is $37, including interborough travel, while the van carriers average cost is $86.) Yet the inefficient, more expensive van rides are unlimited, while the same day, e-hail pilot is much more cost effective. The MTA\u2019s decision to reduce total paratransit budget by limiting e-hail service, rather than decreasing carriers, therefore seems counterintuitive. The Gothamist further listed the e-hail on-demand pilot as one of the\u00a0best transit programs of the past decade<\/a>\u00a0and named its newly announced constraints as one of its\u00a0worst<\/em>\u00a0<\/a>of the past decade as well.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n So, why is the same day transportation program being cut? It seems unclear.\u00a0\u201cI\u2019m disheartened with the lack of transparency over the $16 million they said that the on-demand pilot costs,\u201d Xian continues. \u201cThey then said it was $6 million. Still an impossible number. I wonder if they have inflated the numbers because fear the demand for a working program. I wish everyone understood how had PWDs (Persons With Disabilities) have to fight for so many things that others take for granted, like the ability to travel anywhere on a moment\u2019s notice; or not needing to panic when a doctor\u2019s appointment goes over because it means having to wait up to three hours for a new vehicle; or going into a job knowing you can be on time every day. It seems the only people who don\u2019t get it are the ones who have to pay for it. But it\u2019s not our fault that the MTA has been reckless and inefficient with $614 million allotted to them for paratransit. The thing that really bothers me most here is how callous the powers that be have been about our needs as a community now,\u201d Xian adds.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n For the 1,200 people that were able to use the Same Day Unlimited Program for five years, the new cuts could cause them to go back into isolation, as during the recent Covid pandemic.<\/p>\n So, what are people like Xian Horn doing in the face of losing such a valuable transportation program? They are fighting back. Xian is continuing the fight for equality, that the legacy of Judy Heumann<\/a> (known as the mother of Disability Rights) started.\u00a0\u00a0\u201cAs an American I\u2019m so thankful that we have the right to speak and fight when something is not right and we have laws and legislation like the ADA (Americans With Disabilities Act) that can help make it right,\u201d Xian says. \u201cWith the spirit of Judy with us, we shall overcome, and we will thrive!\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n If you would like to help save the traveling by \u2018Same-Day Travel Program,\u2019 please add your name to the petition, which can be found here<\/a>.<\/p>\n