mamabunny
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2012
- Messages
- 3,834
The issue is not time but drivers having their hands crushed when a guest moves a scooter during tiedown. It is the number 1 injury to bus drivers. From what I have heard the drivers load the scooters. The guests will not back onto the bus themselves.
I did notice during our September trip that the drivers were being VERY conscientious about making sure that mobility device users of all kinds were powered down before touching anything.
I hate to hear that drivers have been injured by Guests who have accidentally moved a scooter during the tiedown process. Sadly, at Disney World there are so many folks who do not use an ECV in their every day life, and are overwhelmed by the experience, which could lead to an injury for the driver if they are unable to process commands appropriately.
Re: the driver loading the scooters backwards - I know you may not be in a place to know, or find out, but what about people who cannot walk up the ramp, and need to ride on to the bus? Before I began using my powerchair full time, I used my personal TravelScoot, even once I reached a point where I couldn't transfer. I had to ride up the ramp; there was no other option for me.
I realize there is no "one size fits all" solution; I think that we will all be interested in how different mobility devices are handled with the new buses, and especially the new "automated" system that will require Guests to ride backwards. I agree with @lanejudy - I believe there are going to be a LOT of requests for the forward-facing spot. I will happily ride backwards; that bothers me less than my concerns about the beeping of the unit; I can only imagine how much every.single.passenger *inside* that bus is going to absolutely hate, loathe & despise that beeping the the Quantum units will make as they are deployed, and released. People are already unhappy about the commotion of the ramp being deployed; I fear that the Quantum units - no matter how cool the LED lights look - are going to cause a real backlash in the bi-pedal community.
Edited to add:
I think it's really important that we let everyone - especially our newest mobility device users - know to turn off the power as soon as you are correctly parked.
With that in mind, I have edited my "How to ECV" boilerplate post tonight to add the following section. I know it won't cure everything; only a small minority of people who use ECVs at WDW will likely ever see it, but if it helps even one driver avoid injury, it's worth it.
Here's the new text I added, exactly as it appears:
This is very important to remember: Once you have successfully parked your mobility device, you MUST turn it off completely. This is for both your safety, as well as the driver's. Any time your device is parked on a bus, boat, Monorail or Skyliner (or ride vehicle) it must be turned off completely for safety.
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