[blindLaw] Commuting from Outside the City

James Fetter jtfetter at yahoo.com
Sun Feb 9 18:39:16 UTC 2020


I think you are right to avoid high crime areas. All it would take is 
for a friend of someone whose case you prosecuted to see you and 
retaliate, and it would be game over. Also, having a family definitely 
changes the acceptable level of risk. The only thing that keeps me sane 
at the moment is that the area in which I live is fairly safe. And, if 
push came to shove, I could walk to and from the Metro.

Could your wife drive you to a park-and-ride, from which you could take 
a bus into the city? My wife and I will soon be figuring out those 
logistics again, when we move to Charlotte for my clerkship. Good luck 
finding a solution that works for you and your family!


On 2/9/2020 12:10 PM, Kelby Carlson via BlindLaw wrote:
> I am a prosecutor, so I'd rather live away from high-crime areas of the county if at all possible. With a five-figure salary and a family, ride-sharing is simply not a viable option monetarily; we did some investigation and rides into and out of the city could cost up to $20 each way. That is several hundred dollars on transportation every month. i'm not sure how you all allocate your funds, but this is totally unworkable given our other expenses. And given that we have children, my wife can't just drive me to and from work. So it seems like a long commute is the only viable option.
>
>> On Feb 9, 2020, at 11:20 AM, Rahul Bajaj via BlindLaw <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>
>> I prefer taking cabs to the extent I can. In India, I had access to my
>> own car and driver, but in the West, that costs a bomb, so services
>> like Uber are the next best option.
>>
>> I sometimes feel guilty about not braving the public transport system
>> or going to some places by foot. But, as Laura says, I see that as the
>> price to be paid to ensure that I am able to get where I need to go
>> faster and can spend the time so saved more productively, rather than
>> just doing what the ideal blind person is supposed to do.
>>
>> Best,
>> Rahul
>>
>>
>>
>>> On 09/02/2020, James Fetter via BlindLaw <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>> What Laura said. I frequently feel unsafe or at least uncomfortable
>>> during my commute, which is on the Baltimore subway system (really just
>>> one line). But it gets me practically to my building, and my wife is
>>> able to drop me off at the station, just a two-minute drive or 15-minute
>>> walk from my place, in the morning. I'm very hesitant to recommend
>>> relying on paratransit given its notorious unreliability. Alternatively,
>>> you may have to tolerate a certain, hopefully not too high, level of
>>> danger. Given where I work, I can't get too worried, unless people start
>>> being victimized in broad daylight. In other words, if you can live
>>> somewhere near a bus line where you wouldn't dare go out by yourself
>>> after dark but you're fine during normal business hours, that might be a
>>> trade-off worth considering. It is very unfortunate that we have to make
>>> these kinds of trade-offs, while sighted professionals simply drive and
>>> complain about traffic. But I don't see a way around it at this point.
>>>
>>>
>>>> On 2/9/2020 7:55 AM, Laura Wolk via BlindLaw wrote:
>>>> I also take ride shares every day. And I get a lot of grief for this
>>>> sometimes from other blind people because I both live and work in DC. But
>>>> the fact of the matter is that I can drive to work in eight minutes and
>>>> the walk plus metro ride is somewhere closer to 25 to 30. And there’s a
>>>> whole lot more that I’d like to do with those 40 minutes every day then be
>>>> stuck in the metro and subject to the added stress of people grabbing and
>>>> pulling and pushing me around. I don’t make a lot of money either, and I
>>>> definitely hear you on the budgeting aspect. But it all depends on what is
>>>> more important to you.
>>>>
>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>>
>>>>> On Feb 9, 2020, at 7:12 AM, Kelby Carlson via BlindLaw
>>>>> <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Given the salary I'll be making and the expense of ridesharing (even at
>>>>> short distances Uber can often cost $6-8) using a service like to get to
>>>>> and from work isn't feasible at all. The place I'll be has paratransit
>>>>> services, so I'll have to see if those are reliable enough to use
>>>>> consistently or not.
>>>>>
>>>>>> On Feb 8, 2020, at 11:35 PM, Deepa Goraya via BlindLaw
>>>>>> <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I would recommend either using rideshare services like Uber and Lyft or
>>>>>> hiring a driver. I hired a driver when I used to intern in downtown Los
>>>>>> Angeles and had to commute by driving and  there were no rideshare
>>>>>> services  back then.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Deepinder K. Goraya, ESQ.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sent From My iPhone
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Feb 8, 2020, at 10:14 PM, Angie Matney via BlindLaw
>>>>>>>> <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>>>>> I personally use rideshares every day. I live close to a metro
>>>>>>> station, but for various reasons (including that I like to bill while I
>>>>>>> am commuting) this works best for me.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> In some areas there are driving services. You might check into the
>>>>>>> feasibility of hiring a service like this for one or both directions of
>>>>>>> your commute.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I used to live where I could walk to work, and I do miss that. Hoefully
>>>>>>> you'll find a solution that works for you.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Feb 8, 2020, at 10:16 AM, James Fetter via BlindLaw
>>>>>>>>> <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, until automated cars are a reality and not perpetually
>>>>>>>> "five years away," there are no alternatives aside, of course, from
>>>>>>>> having a partner who drives. You may just have to tolerate a long
>>>>>>>> commute or put your safety at risk. From my perspective, the former is
>>>>>>>> much preferable to the latter. Depending on salary and whether the
>>>>>>>> employer reimburses for transportation under any circumstances, taking
>>>>>>>> an Uber either all the way in or at least to a bus stop is an option.
>>>>>>>> What city are you moving to?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On 2/6/2020 8:53 PM, Kelby Carlson via BlindLaw wrote:
>>>>>>>>> All,
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> This is not a specifically law-related question, but a question about
>>>>>>>>> commuting to a legal job. At the moment we are living in a small town
>>>>>>>>> where I can walk to work, but soon I will be working in a larger
>>>>>>>>> city. We were hoping to find housing in an area where I could either
>>>>>>>>> walk or take a short bus ride, but the areas where that is possible
>>>>>>>>> are not safe. Unfortunately farther out it is very difficult to find
>>>>>>>>> anything that connects to a bus line and provides for a reasonable
>>>>>>>>> commute time. Are there other alternatives people have found in
>>>>>>>>> situations like these? Buses are by and large the only option—there
>>>>>>>>> is paratransit, but its timing is likely not reliable enough that
>>>>>>>>> commuting exclusively with it would work.
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>>
>> -- 
>> --
>> Rahul Bajaj
>> Candidate for the MPhil in Law
>> Rhodes Scholar (India and Linacre 2018)
>> University of Oxford
>>
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