New York Daily News

New electric Access-A-Ride vans start with short trips

- AP BY EVAN SIMKO-BEDNARSKI

Paratransi­t passengers are getting a new ride: electric AccessA-Ride vans, with the first of 15 vehicles entering service Monday.

“For our paratransi­t customers, it’s really a symbol of the investment that the city and state and the MTA has made in this service,” Chris Pangilinan, MTA’s head of paratransi­t operations, told reporters at a press conference in front of the agency’s lower Manhattan headquarte­rs.

“We’ve got paratransi­t harnessing technology to be on the same level as bus and subway when it comes to investment­s and priorities for the MTA,” he said.

The 15 Ford vans are modified with lifts and other amenities to better serve riders in wheelchair­s and other accessibil­ity devices. The vehicles cost about $180,000 a piece, transit officials said.

The first van will be operated by All Transit LLC, one of the MTA’s Access-A-Ride contractor­s, and will be charged at the company’s depot in Arverne on Queens’ Rockaway peninsula.

Pangilinan said the vans would begin with short trips until the range of the vehicles — which weigh more than standard electric vans — could be establishe­d. All 15 are expected to be in service with different contractor­s by the end of the year.

The new vans come on the heels of 20 new Ford E-450s with internal combustion engines that were added to the fleet last October.

The MTA operates about 1,100 paratransi­t vans meant to provide an alternativ­e transit system to New Yorkers whose disabiliti­es make it difficult for them to use the MTA’s subway or bus system.

The vans require riders to book a trip a day in advance, and riders have historical­ly complained about Access-A-Ride’s late arrivals and delays.

The blue-and-white vans are the subject of an ongoing class action lawsuit in federal court, in which regular riders say the system’s circuitous routes fail to provide comparable service in violation of the state’s human rights law.

Joe Rapaport, executive director at the Brooklyn Center for Independen­ce of the Disabled, said Monday that while newer, more comfortabl­e vans and greener technology was welcomed by Access-A-Ride passengers, the vehicles wouldn’t address core problems with the service.

“What would show the MTA’s real commitment is an improvemen­t in the service,” he told the Daily News. “We’ve been calling for on-demand service [on the blue-and-yellow vans] for years.”

Transit officials on Monday said 79% of polled paratransi­t riders reported being “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with Access-A-Ride service, according to the most recent satisfacti­on survey.

“We’re still not there yet, but we continue to focus on improving service,” NYC Transit President Richard Davey said Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States