Quote:
Originally Posted by Mac Write
I need to do a video on the accessibility of Skytrain which I believed was level boarding until I got a power wheelchair 2 years ago (was walking before). This gap is very unsafe as I have to drive very fast to get over the gap which puts me and others in extreme danger. I have no clue how it didn't make the light of day when the system opened. as it is clearly not level boarding by the disability community.
|
Probably because, as is now clear, during the testing period they underwent (and are still undergoing for the other Mark V train they have that hasn't entered service yet) they don't have among their staff any wheel-chair using individual that would have flagged this.
Yet, wheelchair users do constitute a not insignificant or ignorable segment of skytrain riders, which begs the question as to why not even have someone just test different wheelchair systems to see if they can get on and off without problems.
It's not an uncommon occurrence when it comes to designing and testing transit and public usage systems.
It's kinda like how tools and everyday usage items are often designed with right-handed users in mind (because that's 90% of the population of humans) often forgetting the left-handed people and resulting in some of those things being pretty much unusable for them.
And all because the people designing them didn't have a left-handed person in their team or to test it when it was done.