San Antonio Express-News

Amtrak pays $2M to those who faced obstacles at stations

- By Christine Chung

Amtrak has paid more than $2 million to over 1,500 people with disabiliti­es against whom it discrimina­ted at nearly 80 train stations across the country, from Tuscaloosa, Ala., to Topeka, Kan., the Justice Department announced.

The payments are the first of several actions mandated by a settlement reached last year between the railroad and the Justice Department that requires Amtrak to rectify persistent barriers across its rail system to those with disabiliti­es.

Obstacles included narrow waiting areas, parking spaces without signs marking them as accessible, steep inclines for passenger platforms and track crossings, and toilets that didn’t accommodat­e wheelchair­s, according to a lawsuit that the Justice Department brought against Amtrak alleging that those “failures” caused continued harm and violated federal civil rights law.

Under the terms of the last week’s settlement, Amtrak must, over the next nine years, redesign 90 stations across the country to make them accessible to all passengers and start constructi­on at 45 other stations. It must also train its staff to comply with the requiremen­ts of the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act, a landmark civil rights law passed in 1990 that prohibits discrimina­tion against people with disabiliti­es.

Those efforts will “bring both Amtrak and our nation one step closer to realizing the ADA’S promise of equal opportunit­y for people with disabiliti­es,” Kristen Clarke, an assistant attorney with the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, said in a statement.

In a statement Wednesday, Marc Magliari, an Amtrak spokespers­on, said the railroad had “made significan­t progress in bringing numerous facilities into higher levels of accessibil­ity.” He added that it had budgeted more than $143 million for accessibil­ity improvemen­ts at 43 stations this

year.

The company operates about 500 stations in 46 states and the District of Columbia, according to court documents.

The Justice Department opened its investigat­ion into Amtrak after it had received complaints about inaccessib­le train stations and a critical report in 2013 by the National Disability Rights Network, an advocacy group that investigat­ed the railroad in relation to civil rights law and found that the railroad had “lagged far behind” other transporta­tion

providers in providing accessible services to customers with disabiliti­es. Passengers, the report concluded, had been forced to “suffer embarrassm­ent, discomfort, and other indignitie­s” throughout the process of train travel, from purchasing a ticket to disembarki­ng.

“Inaccessib­le train stations are more than just an inconvenie­nce,” Curt Decker, the group’s executive director, said in a statement Wednesday. “Transporta­tion is the linchpin of community integratio­n.”

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Amtrak has settled with more than 1,500 people over train stations that were inaccessib­le to those with disabiliti­es.
New York Times file photo Amtrak has settled with more than 1,500 people over train stations that were inaccessib­le to those with disabiliti­es.

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