What is proper bus boarding etiquette when a member of your party uses a wheelchair for mobility?
My 8 year old son uses a wheelchair and I always feel bad about boarding the bus first.
We always wait in the designated area, and the driver stops and loads us first.
Okay, so lets say there are 20 people already in line when we show up. A bus shows up 5 minutes later and proceeds to load us first.
I feel bad being loaded first because other people were waiting in line before us. Infact, I feel so bad that we have refused to sit and give those seats of others.
I guess I feel bad because I feel like half of the people in line our probably silently cursing us.
It's the same reason I prefer not to use the GAC.
So. What is the "fair" thing to do?
My 8 year old son uses a wheelchair and I always feel bad about boarding the bus first.
We always wait in the designated area, and the driver stops and loads us first.
Okay, so lets say there are 20 people already in line when we show up. A bus shows up 5 minutes later and proceeds to load us first.
I feel bad being loaded first because other people were waiting in line before us. Infact, I feel so bad that we have refused to sit and give those seats of others.
I guess I feel bad because I feel like half of the people in line our probably silently cursing us.
It's the same reason I prefer not to use the GAC.
So. What is the "fair" thing to do?

. But I think that the root of the frustration is that there just aren't enough busses and drivers on certain routes. Anyone who may be silently cursing is actually just feeling frustration that they have been waiting so long for a bus. It's not YOU they are mad at, it is the bus system.
remember, what goes around comes around (almost every culture believes in that - from Hinduism in the East to the Rule of 3 in the west). someday she may be stuck in a chair behind very rude tall people, and no one will bother giving her the time of day. she should have been thanking heaven that she son CAN walk and can squish to the side a bit so your boy could see...
and good for you for standing up for your son. no matter what, he will know that you love him!