Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

People with disabiliti­es fear impact of ailing taxi industry on area’s subsidized cab service

- BY STEPHANIE ZIMMERMANN, STAFF REPORTER szimmerman­n@suntimes.com | @SZReports

Nearly 7,000 taxis once roamed the streets of Chicago. But with just 1,059 cabs making at least one trip between October and December, people with disabiliti­es are worried about the future of government-subsidized taxi service they rely on.

It’s called the Taxi Access Program, it’s run by PACE, and it provides subsidized, on-demand cab trips around Chicago for just $3.

John William Abbate, 36, is among those who rely on the service. Abbate, a peer mentor who uses a wheelchair, says the Taxi Access Program is more convenient than paratransi­t bus or van rides, which have to be arranged 24 hours in advance.

During the coronaviru­s pandemic, he says, he mostly has been staying home. But when he has called for a taxi, he says, the waits are “way longer than they used to be. There’s nobody out there.”

Abbate says he typically had to wait only about 10 minutes for a taxi to arrive at his West Loop home.

“Now, it’s, like, average half an hour,” he says. “If you’ve got somewhere you’ve got to go, obviously that’s not going to work.”

And trying to get somewhere solely by wheelchair, even going just a short distance, can be a difficult alternativ­e at times during the winter.

Adam Ballard, a housing and transporta­tion analyst for the disability rights group Access Living, says he has taken about a dozen taxi rides since March and also has had to wait longer for a cab to come. One time, his request went unfulfille­d.

“I have a huge concern that, once the pandemic is over, it’s going to be really hard to find a cab,” Ballard says.

Unlike ride-share operators such as Uber and Lyft, the taxi industry is governed by the federal Americans With Disabiliti­es Act, which mandates accessibil­ity.

PACE, the suburban bus system that administer­s the Taxi Access Program, has been offering free taxi rides during the pandemic to lessen the demand placed on paratransi­t buses and to provide safer, oneperson transporta­tion. By picking up the full tab, PACE also is keeping wheelchair-accessible cabs in business, Ballard says. PACE spokeswoma­n Maggie Daly Skogsbakke­n says the public transit agency is monitoring wait times and that it hasn’t gotten complaints about lengthy delays.

The city of Chicago says 95 wheelchair-accessible taxis are on active status and 74 are in foreclosur­e, which still allows them to operate. Together, those 169 wheelchair-accessible taxis represent about a 65% drop in the number of cabs that used to be available.

Rosa Escarena, City Hall’s business affairs and consumer protection commission­er, says the program has been a rare bright spot for some cabbies, who have seen the number of people taking taxis fall drasticall­y as so many more people have been working from home during the pandemic and not getting out as much.

Escarena says one driver, speaking of the Taxi Access Program, told her: “It’s all I’m doing right now.”

 ?? LINKEDIN ?? John William Abbate has relied less on the government-subsidized Taxi Access Program during the pandemic, but he says waits now are “way longer than they used to be. There’s nobody out there.”
LINKEDIN John William Abbate has relied less on the government-subsidized Taxi Access Program during the pandemic, but he says waits now are “way longer than they used to be. There’s nobody out there.”
 ??  ?? Adam Ballard of the disability rights group Access Living: “I have a huge concern that, once the pandemic is over, it’s going to be really hard to find a cab” through the Taxi Access Program.
Adam Ballard of the disability rights group Access Living: “I have a huge concern that, once the pandemic is over, it’s going to be really hard to find a cab” through the Taxi Access Program.

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