You think you have a bad commute? Try doing Maclean Sarr’s hour and a half trip each way… in a wheelchair.
Unable to walk since
contracting cerebral palsy as an infant, the 22-year-old Sarr is now a student
at Gateway Community College in New Haven but lives in Westbrook. That means a 28-mile trip each way, in his motorized
wheelchair, in a bus, a train and another bus.
But last Monday when the train
arrived, nobody could find the metal bridge plate to cover the six-inch gap
between the platform and the railcar. So
the train left without him. That’s when
he went to Twitter.
I saw his cry for help and forwarded it to the right folks at CDOT who immediately contacted Amtrak (which operates Shore Line East trains) and addressed the issue. Thank you, CDOT!
But this incident got me
thinking of what it must be like to commute without being able to walk. Chatting with Maclean, I found him to be
smart, articulate and in no way bitter about his lot in life.
“It’s like an adventure every
day,” he told me. “I don’t get out much, being something of a homebody,” so
studying at Gateway is obviously the high point of his day.
Maclean travels alone without
the assistance of an aide, juggling books and a laptop on his 500 pound motorized
wheelchair. He doesn’t describe himself
as handicapped and certainly not disabled, just “wheelchair bound”.
Bad weather is a challenge
especially on icy surfaces. “I feel safe,” he says. “It just means you have to
take extra time.” Heavy rain is more of
a hassle as he can’t carry an umbrella but has to keep his chair’s joystick
controls dry.
The reason Maclean and almost
3 million other wheelchair users in this country can get around is the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) which became
law in 1990 and turned transportation into a civil right. Any transit agency accepting Federal money to
buy trains or buses must make them accessible.
“It’s hard enough to find a
job let alone get there,” says Doug Holcomb of Greater Bridgeport Transit. “So many of these people have nobody to help
them. Our paratransit service even takes
people to the hospital.”
Organizations like The
Kennedy Center in Trumbull offer free “travel
training” courses for clients with all kinds of mobility challenges, from
the physical (like being blind or unable to walk) to the emotional (phobias or inability
to read a timetable). The mobility their
clients have achieved has changed their lives.
How can we help a fellow
commuter we might come across, someone who is blind, in a wheelchair or otherwise
physically challenged?
“Ask first,” says Maclean. “Other commuters are very nice,” he says. “But
they think they’re helping me when they may actually be getting in the way”.
Even if those in need decline
your help, chat them up. You’ll enjoy
getting to know your fellow commuters.
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