Mark Hughes “went over twice” last year on a Metro Mobility bus after a driver improperly secured his wheelchair. One of the mishaps left him with a concussion, and two wheelchairs were destroyed. Then Metro Mobility vehicles damaged his garage three times while trying to navigate his driveway.
Yet Hughes, who has mild cerebral palsy and lives in Cottage Grove, continues to take Metro Mobility just about every day. The federally mandated transportation service for people with disabilities and certain health conditions is a lifeline for him and some 18,500 other Twin Citians certified to use it. Last year, Metro Mobility transported nearly 2 million people.
“It’s better than nothing,” Hughes said. But “it needs to be overhauled.”
The Star Tribune interviewed 10 customers of Metro Mobility following the release of an audit by the state’s watchdog agency last month. The audit noted missed goals for timely pickups and dropoffs, more than 5,000 ride requests that were denied last year, and other problems.
Their stories have common themes: Inconsistent service, long waits for buses, rides that don’t show up, untimely dropoffs that imperil jobs and medical appointments, circuitous routes that make little sense, rides that were denied, and drivers who they say aren’t trained properly.
Every time a ride is denied, and a pickup or dropoff is delayed, “it has a deeply calamitous, consequential effect on that person’s life,” said Sen. Scott Dibble, DFL-Minneapolis, who chaired a hearing on the Office of the Legislative Auditor’s report before the Senate Transportation Committee last week.
“That’s something we would never tolerate in our own lives — not even one time, and we’re asking other people to tolerate that,” Dibble added.
Service lapses
Users of Metro Mobility must book their rides one to four days before their trip. If a bus arrives 29 minutes late for a pickup, it’s still considered on time. The maximum amount of time permitted for a ride aboard a Metro Mobility vehicle in the Twin Cities service area is 2.5 hours — roughly the time it takes to drive to Duluth. This is largely because buses frequently pick up multiple customers, often in routes that don’t make sense.