A telling article about the DC Metro area's public transportation service for the disabled.
One woman's oxygen tank ran out because she waited so long.
A blind man's ride for a crucial medical appointment never came.
A mentally disabled young man was left standing in the cold outside his locked day center for 20 minutes.
The public transportation system that serves thousands of disabled and elderly people in the Washington region is the subject of a record number of complaints from riders, public hearings and a federal lawsuit.
For the able-bodied, the repercussions of the service problems may be hard to imagine. But for the people who rely on the MetroAccess service to reach medical care, jobs, school and grocery stores, the stakes are extraordinary. Eighty-three percent of the trips are for medical appointments. What happens when a disabled person can't reach the doctor?http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/04/AR2006030401383.html