[blparent] On public transportation with a baby

Erin Rumer erinrumer at gmail.com
Tue Oct 9 15:54:41 UTC 2012


Thanks Steve and yes, I'm sure that stroller you walked around on the bus
was just not being enforced.  I too have wondered about the safety of
children being held on a bus but we also don't have seat belt options for
ourselves on busses so there you go. GRIN  I do have to say however that I
was on a bus years ago that got into an accident and the car that hit the
bus was totaled while we hardly felt a single thing on the bus.  Got to love
physics and I'm just glad to say that I was on the bus that day and not in
the car.

Erin

-----Original Message-----
From: blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Steve Jacobson
Sent: Sunday, September 30, 2012 7:27 AM
To: Blind Parents Mailing List
Subject: Re: [blparent] On public transportation with a baby

Erin,

My experiences were perhaps fifteen years ago, so it is possible that laws
have changed, although I walked around a stroler on a bus a month or so ago.

It could be it just was not enforced.  Still, I can't help but wonder about
the safety of a held child in an accident, especially when sitting on those
side seats near the front.  That is probably not ours to question or argue,
though.  

Best regards,

Steve Jacobson

On Sat, 29 Sep 2012 21:17:43 -0700, Erin Rumer wrote:

>Steve, I'm curious how long ago you were able to do this on the public bus?
>I think that most cities have now made it law or at least their strict 
>rules that children must be taken-out of strollers when on the bus.  
>This is for the child's own safety encase of an accident and the 
>stroller goes flying and it also gets the stroller folded and out of 
>the way for everyone on board.  Every-time I've seen someone get on the 
>bus with a stroller and they don't fold it up, the driver has always 
>told them that the stroller needs to be folded and child must be held 
>or in the seat next to them if they're big enough to sit on their own.

>Erin

>-----Original Message-----
>From: blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org] 
>On Behalf Of Steve Jacobson
>Sent: Saturday, September 29, 2012 8:48 PM
>To: Blind Parents Mailing List
>Subject: Re: [blparent] On public transportation with a baby

>When our kids were little, I was never asked to take them out of the 
>stroler, but I have seen others with strolers on the bus here in the 
>Twincities.
>However, I always kept a firm hand on the stroler when on the bus, and 
>sometimes we went all the way to the back rather than sitting in the 
>front and blocking the aisle.

>Best regards,

>Steve Jacobson

>On Sat, 29 Sep 2012 22:41:36 -0500, Bridgit Pollpeter wrote:

>>Hello,

>>Most public buses are similar, so it really shouldn't matter where you 
>>live, this advice can work from city to city, grin. Yes, a stroller 
>>can lock safely into place where wheelchairs go, but I've only had 
>>drivers offer to do this when the bus was empty. Those spots, 
>>after-all, are intented for people using wheelchairs. We've been asked 
>>several times to hold the baby on our laps and fold our stroller up. 
>>Usually when alone, the driver will assist with this. There are two 
>>reasons for
>>this: one, even when locked, the stroller is at risk of moving around 
>>the bus, so it's deemed safer to hold baby, and two, strollers can 
>>hinder the movement of others on the bus, so when folded up, it leaves 
>>more room for passengers. I'm not saying I agree or disagree with 
>>this, but just relaying the reasons.

>>We've never forewarned cab drivers that we had a carseat, but I can 
>>see the sense in this.

>>As for canes, everyone has there preference. Folding and telescoping 
>>canes certainly can be more convenient in some situations, but I find 
>>a straight cane more reliable, and as Terry said, it provides 
>>information I haven't found folding or telescoping to provide. When 
>>out and about with my little ones, I feel much more comfortable with a 
>>straight cane in order to achieve optimum movement. My husband and I 
>>are also pretty active and move about quickly when walking, so I have 
>>found a straight cane to allow for this activity more so than other 
>>types of canes. Of course, we all develop our own techniques and have our
own preferences.
>>As long as baby and yourself are safe, that's all that matters, grin.

>>Sincerely,
>>Bridgit Kuenning-Pollpeter
>>Read my blog at:
>>http://blogs.livewellnebraska.com/author/bpollpeter/
>> 
>>"History is not what happened; history is what was written down."
>>The Expected One- Kathleen McGowan

>>Message: 9
>>Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2012 19:17:43 -0400
>>From: "Tatyana" <tagriru at gmail.com>
>>To: "Blind Parents Mailing List" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
>>Subject: Re: [blparent] on public transportation with a baby
>>Message-ID: <1347E676A3BF40C0BCEF859EFE1D82FE at homeaksyuk>
>>Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="ISO-8859-1";
>>	reply-type=original

>>Erin and Bran, thank you.  Of course, It's all depends on situation, 
>>most likely I'll be having  the baby in carrier, but just in case I 
>>needed to

>>know where and how  I can put a stroller on a bus . I just thought 
>>there may
>>be some place on a bus where   wheelchairs are strapped or buckled- I
>>don't
>>know how exactly it works. I just saw how a driver helpt a guy in a 
>>wheelchair to do it. Would it be same thing with a stroller? Folding 
>>might not work, since my both  arms wouldn't  be free. I don't use a 
>>bus too often, and when I see parents with kids, usually they are 
>>older ones, not babies, so I'm trying to guess.

>>Thank you.
>>Tatyana.


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