Taxis For All Campaign
Skip NavigationNAVIGATION

 

Previous Posts

jgrappaport taxis Yo!

Salutations, how are you jgrappaport taxis?

Yo 504demsblog taxi!

Jgrappaport   https://goo.gl/D5d1XQ   

   https://goo.gl/u9pbCX    Joseph G. Rappaport 

Sup https://goo.gl/jHjnAU Joseph G. Rappaport

Hi Jgrappaport https://goo.gl/jHjnAU

hi jgrappaport   https://goo.gl/UKHdFN  

hi  https://goo.gl/jVMqoP   

Greetings Jgrappaport https://goo.gl/6jt8G8 htt...

 

Archives

May 2023

August 2022

October 2018

May 2018

March 2018

January 2018

November 2016

June 2016

November 2015

October 2011

August 2011

May 2011

December 2010

October 2010

July 2010

May 2010

April 2010

May 2009

April 2009

February 2009

December 2008

November 2008

June 2008

April 2008

February 2008

January 2008

December 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007


Taxis For All Campaign News Blog

Thursday, July 15, 2010
Article can be found at http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20100715/FREE/100719906

System to dispatch accessible cabs was found to be underutilized; the cost of a call to hail the specialized cabs: $177.

By Jeremy Smerd
Crain's New York

Published: July 15, 2010 - 2:01 pm

The Taxi & Limousine Commission acknowledged yesterday the failure of a recently concluded two-year $1 million program to provide dispatch service to wheelchair users.

Hailing accessible cabs has long been nearly impossible due to their rarity, but incredibly, the dispatch initiative did not help.

"Generally the program was very expensive and unfortunately not well-utilized," TLC head David Yassky told state Assemblymen during a hearing on legislation to require all taxis to accommodate wheelchair-users.

Calls to the dispatcher, expected to average 250 a day, hovered around eight – or about $177 a call. Only 2,701 wheelchair users of an estimated 60,000 citywide used the service.

The program was intended to gauge demand for wheelchair-accessible cabs. Officials had hoped increased demand would spur more taxi owners to outfit their cabs with ramps.

But drivers hated the program, taxi-industry executives said during an Assembly hearing yesterday. A requirement that drivers with accessible cabs enroll in the dispatch program led many to avoid purchasing such cabs altogether. Drivers skipped mandatory training programs on operating wheelchair ramps and ignored calls for rides, preferring instead to be fined.

Wait times for riders using the dispatch service averaged 30 minutes, the TLC says. Dispatchers did not have GPS systems to locate the cabs nearest to customers, although the TLC says that wouldn't have mattered because cabbies could refuse up to two calls per shift.

Mr. Yassky said the program may have been doomed from the start because many wheelchair users are on fixed incomes and don't take cabs.

Ethan Gerber, executive director of the Greater New York Taxi Association, whose members operate many of the city's 240 wheelchair-accessible taxicabs, says the program's failure was predictable because taxis, unlike livery cars, are designed for street hails, not dispatch service.

Livery cars did not participate in the program. A TLC report on the program is due later this summer.
posted by Webmaster at
0 Comments (post your comments)     email this post  
 
 

Statcounter