Access-A-Bus inconsistencies strand woman at Halifax food bank
Anjuli Patil | CBC News | Posted: November 27, 2017 10:33 PM | Last Updated: November 28, 2017
Jodi Van Iderstine claims she was denied a ride because of her walker and suitcase
A Halifax woman with mobility issues says she was left humiliated, frustrated and stranded after an Access-A-Bus driver said the walker and suitcase that she brought to a local food bank couldn't come back with her.
Jodi Van Iderstine said she was able to get to the Parker Street Food and Furniture Bank using the service — a shared ride bus service for individuals who are unable to use Halifax Transit due to a mobility impairment or cognitive disability — on Friday with her walker and suitcase meant for carrying food.
But she said she ran into trouble on the way back.
"When I went to get on the bus to come back home, this particular driver — and there's been an issue with this driver in the past, same thing, same place — turned around and said, 'You can't get on the bus,'" said Van Iderstine.
Supervisor 'in no mood to listen'
Van Iderstine said the driver called his supervisor and both told her she had "too much stuff." She said the driver — who was not the same driver who took her to the food bank — had an issue with her rollator, which is a walker with wheels and a seat, and her suitcase full of food.
The suitcase, Van Iderstine said, was strapped to the seat of her walker with bungee cords and was secure. But she said the driver's supervisor was "in no mood to listen to reason."
"That supervisor treated me like I was mentally incompetent and useless. He couldn't get out of there fast enough because he could not logically or reasonably defend the positions he was taking and he knew it," said Van Iderstine.
She said she can only get a food order from Parker Street once a month and that she doesn't have the extra income to take the $5 round trip to and from the food bank multiple times a month.
"What is the point of Access-A-Bus if you can't get your groceries home?" she said, adding she called Nova Scotia's Department of Community Services to get a ride home.
'A little bit troubling'
Van Iderstine said the same driver and supervisor refused to drive her home back in April for the same reason. She said Kevin McKay, the operations manager at the food bank, ended up driving her home.
McKay said he didn't see Van Iderstine's interaction with the driver and the supervisor in April, but confirmed he drove her home that day.
"It's a little strange for her to have to get a ride out and then to be denied service getting back with basically just a little bit more weight," said McKay, adding there needs to be more consistency at Access-A-Bus.
"She didn't leave Parker Street with anything more than she came with.… If she came with it, she obviously was allowed to have service with Access-A-Bus. And then for her to be denied service, yeah, that's a little bit troubling."
Driver's right to refuse
A spokesperson for the Halifax municipality, which operates the Access-A-Bus service, would not comment on Van Iderstine's case specifically but said users are required to keep their packages to a minimum.
"If in the past a person has made it onto a bus with more packages than the rules allow, the driver was simply going above and beyond to accommodate. A driver who does not want to push these set restrictions is not at fault," Nick Ritcey, a senior communications adviser for Halifax told CBC News in an email.
Ritcey also pointed to rules in the Access-A-Bus guide that state drivers "have the right to refuse to carry packages they consider unsafe."
'Humiliating'
Van Iderstine said the situation was both "humiliating" and "frustrating."
She believes she's being denied service because she filed a complaint against another driver two years ago. But whatever the reason, she said she doesn't want to be stranded again.
"The Access-A-Bus management needs to take some sensitivity training on what it's like to be faced with physical challenges," she said. "And they need to start using a little common sense and compassion. You can't treat people like they're stupid."