auger said:
The ones that tick me off are the big families that get on first just because they are with someone on a
scooter. I have to wait in line and dont understand why they get to jump on before everyone that waited in line for a half hour already. They need to let one person go with them and the rest wait in line like everyone else.
Well, first, it averages out. Of ALL the times I've used an
ECV on a bus, I have been a party of three once, from Pop Century to Animal Kingdom. EVERY SINGLE BUS RIDE other than that, I have been alone. Even going from Downtown Disney to Old Key West, my friends waited in line with everyone else. Surely that balances out against some of these apparent big families? Do you feel a little better now?
auger said:
Also you never see those people get up or just stand when they get on. They all sit and dont move. You see someone get on with their scooter and jump right up and take a seat. Who needs a fast pass for the day when you can just rent a scooter and get on all the rides and buses first
I have no control over what people with whom I don't travel do. As for someone getting on a bus with their scooter and then "jump[ing] right up" to take a seat, well (a) IT'S NOT SAFE TO STAY IN THE ECV!!!! And (b) please let me know the next time you see me move in any fashion other than slowly and painfully, limping and leaning on a cane.
And I GIVE UP on from where this "get on the rides first" asinine misconception comes. MOST lines at Walt Disney World are mainstreamed, meaning ALL Guests use the SAME line the ENTIRE way from the Greeter to boarding.
ONLY when the line's design doesn't accommodate wheelchairs and/or ECVs are they sent off in a different direction.
Example: Splash Mountain has stairs. ECVs and most wheelchairs can't climb stairs. Partway through the line, they're diverted.
Example: the wheelchair-accessible truck at Kilimanjaro Safari boards in a different location than the regular trucks, and there's a ramp for wheelchairs. Guests are diverted most of the way through the line. There are only one or two such trucks operating at a time, so if two or more Guests in wheelchairs approach the loading area at a time when only one truck is running, the second/third Guests have to wait ADDITIONAL FULL CYCLES - up to an hour longer than Guests in the standard queue.
Example: ECVs can't fit through the turnstiles at Pirates of the Caribbean. I didn't ride it at Walt Disney World for four years - because I can't manage a wheelchair well on slopes.
Example: ECVs aren't allowed through the queue at Tower of Terror, period.