Pure numbers alone say the petition against the Disabled
Adult Transportation System to revoke the new two-hour cancellation policy is
on life-support. In a Aug. 1 Edmonton Journal reporter Andrea Sands wrote there
are about 10,800 DATS users in Edmonton. On Monday morning, 354 names were on the
petition, representing three per cent of the DATS ridership; and all of those names are
not people who take DATS. My experience as a newspaper reporter tells me this
is not a story at all. And we can’t expect under media outlets to cover it with it
with such numbers.
We had plans to deliver the petition to Edmonton City Hall
next week and we were hoping for 1,000 names. But I am seriously re-thinking that position. One thousand names makes a statement. Groups and causes need to carefully pick requesting time with
polititians. Such numbers do not make a strong case and I would be uneasy
asking to meet with the mayor or councillors.
But perhaps there’s a greater issue—one that I have seen for
the past decade. People with disabilities in this province have not been very
vocal. (I have cerebral palsy.) Only in the past few months have there been
demonstrations at the Alberta legislature in Edmonton protesting provincial
government cutbacks. It has been quite a long time since Edmonton city hall has
seen a protest over services for Edmontonians with disabilities.
I am at a loss why this is. Clearly, I don’t know. There
isn’t a movement for Edmontonians with disabilities. So, perhaps when an issue
such as the new DATS policy needs to be challenged, people are shy. Or don’t know
what to do. Or maybe even scared. And it takes time for that mindset to change.
I will re-access the position numbers Friday and will offer
my thoughts. I know one thing for sure: public polls do not lie. But we can
learn many things from it for a future protest.
YOU CAN SIGN THE PETITION HERE
YOU CAN SIGN THE PETITION HERE
COMING UP THIS EVENING ON TEA WITH TAIT: The first part of a series of my time with Wayne Gretzky, just before 9 p.m.
1 comment:
As I said in a reply on your Facebook page I actually think you did well to get the numbers you got.
One problem you have with getting people interested in fighting is that, given the nature of the user base, you can't just do your promotion in blogs and on Facebook; while those are by far the easiest means of communication with many people, there are still those that do not use a computer very much.
Unfortunately I don't have an answer for you, other than you need to find a way to "get the word out" to the rest of the DATS user community.
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