www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Blockade hits transit discrimination

Memphis,Tenn.--We’re proud members of ADAPT (American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today). We were waiting at the bus stop and saw a bus with a wheelchair lift coming around 3:15 p.m. The bus driver saw us sitting there in our wheelchairs, he braked slightly, then pulled off. He refused to stop. The bus wasn’t crowded, he just didn’t want to pick us up.

We started calling MATA (Memphis Area Transit Authority) mainline and MATAplus trying to get a ride back to work. MATAplus is the transit system for people functionally unable to use the fixed route system. According to the Americans with Disabilities Act, if the mainline bus fails in any way, MATAplus is supposed to pick up the slack.

We couldn’t get hold of any of the powers that be. We called James Anglin, the MATAplus manager, and William Hudson, the MATA president. Nobody was in their office and the staff at MATAplus kept transferring us or wouldn’t answer our call or wouldn’t return our calls. We just got tired. We knew the next bus would come at 4:08 p.m. Just as it was coming around the corner we saw a MATAplus bus pull up across the street. I thought, aha! They’re here to pick us up. Wrong! They picked up another guy. We saw a mainline bus coming and decided to block it. We figured, nobody is calling us, nobody is giving us anything, so let’s stop this bus and maybe we can negotiate.

We had been out all afternoon trying to get some way back to the office. Then a MATAplus bus did pull up, and someone told us that was the bus we were to get on. When we started towards it, the driver of the bus we were blocking took off, and so did the MATAplus bus. So we decided to block the van of a MATA supervisor who came out here. The police are here, but MATA is not going to prosecute us for blocking their bus.

They aren’t going to prosecute us because they know that they’re in the wrong and totally incompetent. It’s 5:35 p.m. now. Transportation in Memphis for disabled people is totally undependable. But a lot of people with disabilities have no choice. You have to get to your job; get home from your job; pick your children up from day care; go to the grocery store; go to the doctor. You’re at their mercy. The drivers who passed us by will probably not even be reprimanded, it happens so frequently.

--Renee and Deborah

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons