Katieeldr, I guess if someone is telling me that you dont see bus lines of a 100 people or people on scooters jumping in line constantly then I guess i am calling them a liar. Ive been to Disney 15 times in the last 5 years and see it almost EVERY day. I go usually in the off season and cant even imagine what it would be like in prime time. I have 3 handicaped people in my family and have adopted 6 kids 3 of which are Bi-racial so im not even the closest thing to being descriatory. Im just saying being on a scooter dont make it right to jump lines. 2 of the handicaped kids in my family are permanently in wheelchairs and we send him or her on the bus with their moms and the rest of us wait like we are supposed to. Stop all the whining about being on scooters and just be fair to all the other people that have been waiting.
Oh, please. You don't know a THING about me. Never mind that YOU'RE the one constantly whining because you perceive needing to wait longer in line (what about those times at park closing when additional buses pull up next to your resort's bus? The
ECV/wheelchair Guest CAN'T board that bus, no matter HOW long they've been waiting, and YES, it DOES happen - I've seen THREE buses for Pop Century all boarding at once).
Once again - I do NOT bring twenty, or ten, or even the allowed five, or most of the time even ONE additional Guest with me through the back door of the bus; but you don't NOTICE the MANY Guests like me because we don't prove your complaints.
If you "usually" go in the off-season, you must therefore sometimes go in the 'on' season - so you would notice (not just imagine) what "it" would be like in prime time.
Florida law, common sense, and SIMPLE LOGISTICS make it NECESSARY for the ECV (again, they're NOT scooters - a scooter is a toy or a two-wheeled motor vehicle) or wheelchair to board a public transit vehicle FIRST - before anyone's feet are at risk of being run over or before anyone sits in the seats that ultimately need to be vacated so the ECV or wheelchair can be tied down - and the additional seats that need to be vacated so any transferring Guest can ride the bus safely.
You may not feel you're being discriminatory (assuming that's what descriatory means?) but your IDEAS and SUGGESTIONS are. There are all kinds of discrimination, and segregating people by their abilities and handicaps and expecting them to use different (inferior/less frequent/etc) transportation than everyone else IS discrimination.
auger said:
2 of the handicaped kids in my family are permanently in wheelchairs and we send him or her on the bus with their moms and the rest of us wait like we are supposed to.
Would you mind explaining this? HOW do you send these four people on the bus while the rest of you wait in line (noting that "like we are supposed to" is YOUR determination, NOT Disney's, given that Disney allows the wheelchair/ECV Guest to be directly accompanied by up to FIVE members of their party)?
Do they stand back from the marked area until the rest of you board the bus, forcing the bus driver to stop loading, close the door, load them through the back, tie them down, retract the ramp/lift, go back to the front of the bus, open the door, continue boarding passengers?
Do they board the bus when it first arrives no matter where you are in line, and meet up with you later?
Do they refuse to board the bus until they estimate you'll be on the same bus, then signal the driver they want to get on that bus?
If it's one or three, how do they handle later-arriving Guests in wheelchairs/
ecvs?
Enquiring minds want to know.