Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Public Transportation and Smart Growth
Showing Original Post only (View all)Amtrak Asks 2 People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride [View all]
This can't be right. Hat tip, Trainorders:
Passenger Trains > $25,000 for 2 pax in wheelchairs to ride Amtrak CHI-BNL
Date: 01/18/20 08:32
$25,000 for 2 pax in wheelchairs to ride Amtrak CHI-BNL
Author: Lurch_in_ABQ
https://www.npr.org/2020/01/17/797355136/amtrak-asks-two-people-in-wheelchairs-to-pay-25-000-for-a-ride
"Amtrak Asks 2 People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride"
"It costs just $16 to buy a one-way ticket on the Amtrak train from Chicago to Bloomington, Ill., unless you're the two people who use wheelchairs and tried to buy tickets recently. They were told their tickets will cost not $16 but $25,000....."
[ Reply To This Message ] [ Quote ]
Date: 01/18/20 08:39
Re: $25,000 for 2 pax in wheelchairs to ride Amtrak CHI-BNL
Author: joemvcnj
https://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?4,4940598
Date: 01/18/20 08:32
$25,000 for 2 pax in wheelchairs to ride Amtrak CHI-BNL
Author: Lurch_in_ABQ
https://www.npr.org/2020/01/17/797355136/amtrak-asks-two-people-in-wheelchairs-to-pay-25-000-for-a-ride
"Amtrak Asks 2 People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride"
"It costs just $16 to buy a one-way ticket on the Amtrak train from Chicago to Bloomington, Ill., unless you're the two people who use wheelchairs and tried to buy tickets recently. They were told their tickets will cost not $16 but $25,000....."
[ Reply To This Message ] [ Quote ]
Date: 01/18/20 08:39
Re: $25,000 for 2 pax in wheelchairs to ride Amtrak CHI-BNL
Author: joemvcnj
https://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?4,4940598
Passenger Trains > Amtrak in hot water charging 25k for passage
Pages: [ 1 ][ 2 ] [ Next ]Current Page:1 of 2
Date: 01/17/20 16:36
Amtrak in hot water charging 25k for passage
Author: amtrakbill
From NPR
Amtrak Asks Two People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride
January 17, 20206:18 PM ET
By: Joe Shapiro
A member of the station staff pushes a portable wheelchair lift along the platform at an Amtrak station in DeLand, Fla. The company says its policies for having to adjust or remove seats has changed.
Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
It costs just $16 to buy a one-way ticket on the Amtrak train from Chicago to Bloomington, Ill., unless you're the two people who use wheelchairs and tried to buy tickets recently. They were told their tickets will cost not $16 but $25,000.
....
Pages: [ 1 ][ 2 ] [ Next ]Current Page:1 of 2
Date: 01/17/20 16:36
Amtrak in hot water charging 25k for passage
Author: amtrakbill
From NPR
Amtrak Asks Two People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride
January 17, 20206:18 PM ET
By: Joe Shapiro
A member of the station staff pushes a portable wheelchair lift along the platform at an Amtrak station in DeLand, Fla. The company says its policies for having to adjust or remove seats has changed.
Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
It costs just $16 to buy a one-way ticket on the Amtrak train from Chicago to Bloomington, Ill., unless you're the two people who use wheelchairs and tried to buy tickets recently. They were told their tickets will cost not $16 but $25,000.
....
INVESTIGATIONS
Amtrak Asks 2 People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride
January 17, 20206:18 PM ET
JOSEPH SHAPIRO
Updated at 11:32 p.m. ET
It costs just $16 to buy a one-way ticket on the Amtrak train from Chicago to Bloomington, Ill., unless you're the two people who use wheelchairs and tried to buy tickets recently. They were told their tickets will cost not $16 but $25,000.
When Adam Ballard saw what Amtrak wanted to charge, he couldn't believe it.
"I thought it was a mistake. That's the price of a car," Ballard says. "How can that be possible? I was sure it was a mistake. But I've seen it in writing. So I know it's not."
Ballard works for a disability service and advocacy center in Chicago called Access Living. He is its housing and transportation policy analyst, and a group from his office is headed to Bloomington next Wednesday for a work retreat.
There are 10 of them, and five including Ballard use wheelchairs. Their train has three cars. Each car has one space for a wheelchair. That makes three spaces for five people in wheelchairs. In the past, when Access Living gave advance notice that it was sending a large group, Amtrak took out more seats to fit more wheelchairs. Once, it took out seats in the dining car and charged a few hundred dollars extra.
"I use a power wheelchair. It is standard size for a power chair, but it's larger than most manual chairs. So I take up a little extra space," Ballard says. "But always in the past, no matter what kind of assortment of people and devices we had together for our group, it was never a problem to get everybody on board."
But not this time.
On Dec. 30, an Amtrak agent for group sales based in Philadelphia wrote: "I received a cost regarding the removal of seats and I've been advised this will be over $25 K. Would you like for me to proceed with the request?"
Someone from the group wrote back: "Am I reading this correctly?"
The answer came back on Jan. 2. "The cost is correct," the agent wrote, citing a new policy for taking out those seats. The agent explained that it's expensive to take out extra seats and that it means taking a car out of service.
"With removal of seats, it can be quite costly," the agent wrote. "In previous years, the removal of seats from the coach cars incurred fees that Amtrak absorbed ... We understand and appreciate your loyalty with Amtrak. Going forward, we cannot continue to absorb these fees. These polices have changed nationwide as of 2019."
....
Amtrak Asks 2 People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride
January 17, 20206:18 PM ET
JOSEPH SHAPIRO
Updated at 11:32 p.m. ET
It costs just $16 to buy a one-way ticket on the Amtrak train from Chicago to Bloomington, Ill., unless you're the two people who use wheelchairs and tried to buy tickets recently. They were told their tickets will cost not $16 but $25,000.
When Adam Ballard saw what Amtrak wanted to charge, he couldn't believe it.
"I thought it was a mistake. That's the price of a car," Ballard says. "How can that be possible? I was sure it was a mistake. But I've seen it in writing. So I know it's not."
Ballard works for a disability service and advocacy center in Chicago called Access Living. He is its housing and transportation policy analyst, and a group from his office is headed to Bloomington next Wednesday for a work retreat.
There are 10 of them, and five including Ballard use wheelchairs. Their train has three cars. Each car has one space for a wheelchair. That makes three spaces for five people in wheelchairs. In the past, when Access Living gave advance notice that it was sending a large group, Amtrak took out more seats to fit more wheelchairs. Once, it took out seats in the dining car and charged a few hundred dollars extra.
"I use a power wheelchair. It is standard size for a power chair, but it's larger than most manual chairs. So I take up a little extra space," Ballard says. "But always in the past, no matter what kind of assortment of people and devices we had together for our group, it was never a problem to get everybody on board."
But not this time.
On Dec. 30, an Amtrak agent for group sales based in Philadelphia wrote: "I received a cost regarding the removal of seats and I've been advised this will be over $25 K. Would you like for me to proceed with the request?"
Someone from the group wrote back: "Am I reading this correctly?"
The answer came back on Jan. 2. "The cost is correct," the agent wrote, citing a new policy for taking out those seats. The agent explained that it's expensive to take out extra seats and that it means taking a car out of service.
"With removal of seats, it can be quite costly," the agent wrote. "In previous years, the removal of seats from the coach cars incurred fees that Amtrak absorbed ... We understand and appreciate your loyalty with Amtrak. Going forward, we cannot continue to absorb these fees. These polices have changed nationwide as of 2019."
....
5 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Amtrak Asks 2 People Who Use Wheelchairs To Pay $25,000 For A Ride [View all]
mahatmakanejeeves
Jan 2020
OP