[nabs-l] transportation in your area

clinton waterbury clinton.waterbury at gmail.com
Sat May 23 05:58:31 UTC 2009


That's sort of like how Utah is, but we don't have a subway system.   
We have a light-rail system called trax and another train called  
frontrunner that goes from Salt Lake City to Ogden, whitch is about an  
hour's drive away by car depending on how fast you're driving.  Most  
of the time the bus drivers are pretty cool and people are generally  
helpfull.
On May 22, 2009, at 2:21 PM, Ashley Bramlett wrote:

> Hi all,
> Let's have a more productive topic than rehashing ACB/NFB  
> frictions.  I've got one.
>
> How is the transportation in your area?  Say where you go to school  
> as that makes a difference.  If you're in a metropolitian area its  
> probably decent.
> How about near your home?  If you have transportation, is it  
> adaquate? Are bus drivers accomodating by calling out bus stops upon  
> request?  Are they helpful in giving directions to find seats if you  
> want it?
>
> For me, its pretty decent at school.  I'm near DC, in northern va.   
> When I attended the large state school George Mason University, GMU  
> was great.  The CUE bus came to GMU and went around the city and to  
> the Vienna metro.  Metro Buses were just across the street from the  
> college.
> At Marymount in Arlington, the school shuttle bus went to Ballston  
> metro.  That's our subway.  From there you could take the metro, get  
> Art(arlington) buses, many metro buses, or walk to many shops and  
> restaurants.  Ruby Tuesday, IHOP, a pizza place, and Chevy's were  
> just a few accessible.
> At home there are not sidewalks and metro buses are not accessible  
> to us.  So I have not done much public transit travel.  I did some  
> on mobility and when I lived at MU since I had access to them.
>
> In my limited experience, metro is good.  Other customers are  
> friendly and happily answer my questions as to what line to go on as  
> there is no accessible way to know you're in front of an orange or  
> blue train; they share the same track.  Drivers announce stops on  
> buses although many now have talking systems announcing major stops  
> automatically.
> On a crowded bus or subway as I'm departing its helpful that most of  
> the riders move out of the way so I can have a clear path and exit  
> before the door closes.  Especially on metro rail, subway, you have  
> a limited time to exit until the door shuts and you miss your stop.
> On metro rail drivers announce stops, but if I can't hear them due  
> to low voice or something, I count stops or ask fellow passengers.
>
> Metro service is better during the day time as with all public  
> transit services.  On weekends its infrequent.  Some lines do not  
> run and others only run a bus once an hour.
>
> So those are my thoughts.
> Ashley
>
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