New accessibility and safety rules for Iqaluit cabs a first step for advocates
CBC
For years, Noah Papatsie has pushed for better accessibility in Iqaluit, first as a former city councillor on the taxi bylaw committee, and as a disability advocate.
More than a decade after he first started that campaign, there's progress on making it easier for people with accessibility needs to get around town.
"I'm really happy there's an accessible taxi, that's one step forward for safety," Papatsie said.
City council has passed a new bylaw, which requires cab companies to have at least one vehicle available at all times, which meets disability standards.
That rule affects cab companies with more than four licensed vehicles, as well as shuttles and buses.
Ronnie McGregor, business administrator for the city's main taxi provider, Caribou Cabs, said the company currently doesn't have any vehicles that meet that standard, but one is being shipped to Iqaluit.
Beyond just having a disability-friendly vehicle, Papatsie also wants companies to ensure any communications inside the cab to be accessible too.
That means supplying information in different forms for different physical and intellectual disabilities, as well as for Inuktitut speakers.
"The taxi should have accessible information … and information in regards to our language, which is Inuktitut," Papatsie said.
As a blind passenger, he said there have been times when he's been dropped off at a corner of the street, instead of by the entrance to his destination, because of communication errors.
"Individual drivers need to have a better understanding of different disabilities … and how to talk with the individual who has those," he said.
McGregor said Caribou Cabs is collaborating with the government of Nunavut on a new adaptive transport project, and driver training will be part of that.
"For us, adapted transport, especially for the elderly, is important and we were expecting that to be added into the bylaw," he said.
The new bylaw also bans people who have been convicted of violent crimes, including sexual assault and robbery, from getting a chauffeur's permit.