After a wonderful vacation with my family, it was time to head home. Our flight landed at Logan at about 11:45pm and it took approximately 30 minutes to wait for the plane to empty out, wait for the aisle chair to get my daughter out of the plane and wait for her wheelchair to be brought up from the belly of the plane.
Our plan was to take 2 cabs home for the 20 minute ride from Logan to Newton Centre – one of my wife, two of the kids and the luggage and a second for me and my daughter Marianne with her wheelchair.
I did my research in advance and found that it was in fact possible to get a wheelchair-capable taxi at Logan:
http://www.massport.com/logan-airport/inside-airport/pages/accessibilitytofromlogan.aspx
The taxi line was very short and the wheelchair taxi showed up at the same time the rest of my family piled into their taxi to go home. This is when the excitement started:
Taxi 1. The first taxi the came was advertised as a wheelchair-capable taxi, but the driver looked at us and informed us that it didn’t “pass its inspection” and he wouldn’t be able to accommodate us. The Massport dispatcher gave the driver a piece of her mind and sent him on his way.
Taxi 2. The second taxi showed up about 10 minutes later – it was a new minivan with the accessible ramp cut into the back. The driver looked like he never used the feature before and spent about 10 minutes trying to move the rear seat out of the way and ended up removing both rows of seats to get them out of the way. He took out the small extension ramp and loosely propped it up against the back of his van so Marianne could drive in. She got in the van as far as her chair would allow and it did not leave enough room to close the back door of the van. By this time, she was very tired and frustrated, but she backed out of van ad the dispatcher called another one. The person on the other end of mentioned that a Toyota Sienna accessible taxi might be the best solution.
Taxi 3. Within a few minutes, an accessible Sienna approached…and then sped by us without stopping.
Taxi 4. The person on the radio said they found another Sienna, but then I heard a minute later that the ramp on that one was not working.
Taxi 5. After a long wait, a fifth taxi showed up — and it was exactly like the first one that didn’t fit Marianne’s wheelchair.
Taxi 6. Just as Taxi 5 was leaving, Taxi 6 showed up. It was a Toyota Sienna and as advertised, Marianne’s chair fit in the back. The driver was extremely helpful and eager and carefully helped her into the car. When she got in, I saw that the taxi did not have wheelchair tie-downs or any seatbelt for the wheelchair passenger (I would never drive her in my personal van without the 250 lb. chair safely secured). We decided to press on without the safety features since it was so late.
We arrived at home around 2am safe and sound and I was reminded yet again how difficult it is for people in wheelchairs to accomplish the basic things that all the rest of us take for granted – even if they are promised as a basic right.