Handi-Van passengers and management are growing increasingly frustrated with the paratransit service鈥檚 city-controlled reservation line and the obstacles it poses to booking a ride.
Typically, those seeking a ride wait between 20 to 45 minutes just to reach an operator, said Charlotte Townsend, paratransit vice president for Oahu Transit Services, which runs for the city.
She and the riders that OTS serves call the situation unacceptable.
鈥淚鈥檓 extremely frustrated as you are about the slowness,鈥 Townsend told members of the local paratransit advocacy group Citizens For a Fair ADA Ride at the group鈥檚 latest quarterly meeting last month.
Getting adequate phone and reservation software to assist Handi-Van riders, she said, has been a 鈥渓ong-fought battle.鈥
Not only do the heavy call volumes and wait times pose a problem, but the reservation lines occasionally crash altogether — as they did at least twice in November — leaving Handi-Van users unable to book their rides as planned.
Those rides, which are booked by Americans with Disabilities Act-qualified users, often include .
One longtime Oahu paratransit advocate has already filed a complaint with the , hoping it will intervene and force the city to fix the situation.
However, the Handi-Van鈥檚 phone reservation problems started long before the moved those phone lines over to the city鈥檚 -run phone network, city officials say.
Further, the reservation line was moved there a year ago because OTS didn鈥檛 have the budget to replace or maintain its own 鈥渙bsolete鈥 phone equipment, added Mark Wong, the city鈥檚 IT director and chief information officer.
Setting up a dedicated connection between OTS鈥 reservation lines and the city鈥檚 central call manager would, at the very least, allow OTS to respond more quickly when its reservation lines crash, Wong said.
Still, Townsend said that 鈥渨hat has happened is a failure for their system to handle our volume.鈥
Both the reservation lines and Handi-Van鈥檚 dispatch software, run by Toronto-based had crashed the day before the C-FADAR meeting, Townsend said.
Honolulu鈥檚 paratransit riders would benefit from an upgrade to better software on both fronts, she added.
鈥淚t鈥檚 taken too long,鈥 Townsend told several dozen Handi-Van riders at the Nov. 14 meeting.
鈥淭he consequences, I believe, are not absorbed on all levels of government as to the ramifications and the impacts that it has on your life every day, and my staff and I are extremely frustrated by it.鈥
Improving Service An Uphill Climb
The lengthy wait times and crashes are just two of multiple challenges facing Handi-Van.
It鈥檚 one of the nation鈥檚 busiest and most heavily used paratransit systems per capita. The service provides more than 4,000 rides to disabled passengers each day on average, and its $2 fare hasn鈥檛 been increased in 18 years.
The city has struggled for years to improve the fleet鈥檚 on-time performance so that vans arrive no earlier than 10 minutes of the scheduled pickup time and no later than 30 minutes. Handi-Van only hit its monthly on-time performance goal of at least 90% once this year — back in January, Townsend reported at the November meeting.
Replacing older vans with new ones , leading to strains on their maintenance. In three separate incidents this past decade, while on the road. Two passengers were aboard in one of those instances. The driver who got them out safely was lauded as a hero.
The system has also had issues complying with ADA regulations. found that Handi-Van was in violation by accepting too many so-called 鈥渟ubscription鈥 rides for local service agencies, leaving too few rides available for individual riders.
The city auditor is slated to provide an update by the end of the 2019 on how well Handi-Van has met the goals of that 2016 audit.
Currently, however, it鈥檚 the phone lines that are drawing passenger ire in particular.
鈥淭he phone system is horrible,鈥 said Handi-Van rider Mary Jane Tiedemann. 鈥淯sually it takes a half hour, almost an hour to get through.鈥
Tiedemann said she鈥檚 gotten in trouble at work a couple of times for trying to book a Handi-Van when she wasn鈥檛 supposed to be on the phone — she was placed on hold for too long.
Sometimes, added longtime Handi-Van user Joy Nakata-Muranaka, users get disconnected from the reservation line right when their turn in the queue comes up. Then, they have to start over.
鈥淭he phone lines need to be improved,鈥 she said.
The technical issues sometimes prevent her friends from booking doctors’ appointments the following day, Nakata-Muranaka said.
‘A Crappy System’
The latest reservation-line crash happened Nov. 23, part of a power surge that knocked out multiple services based in the Frank Fasi Municipal Building as crews were doing maintenance on the building鈥檚 surge protectors, Wong said.
Handi-Van鈥檚 lines were added to the city鈥檚 -run phones in December 2018, he said.
鈥淚t was obsolete,鈥 Wong said of OTS鈥 former phone system, run with equipment. Meanwhile, the city鈥檚 Cisco lines, with Voice Over Internet Protocol technology were more advanced and better protected from potential outside attacks, he added.
Still, Wong said he wasn鈥檛 sure whether the transfer from OTS鈥 older system to the upgraded system in any way contributed to a particularly bad crash on Dec. 3, 2018.
Donald Sakamoto, C-FADAR鈥檚 longtime president, filed a complaint with the FTA several months later. When the system crashed again, on May 4,聽 Sakamoto said he couldn鈥檛 get a response from city DTS officials on what caused the outage. In August, the FTA reached out to him about his earlier complaint.
Now, the federal office is in talks with the city about the situation, according to , the city鈥檚 paratransit branch chief.
The key obstacle to getting the Handi-Van phone lines back up after a crash are the security firewalls in the city鈥檚 phone network, both Townsend and Wong said.
鈥淲hen our phone system goes down on a Saturday, there is no one on site that we have control over that can get through those firewalls to fix our phone system,鈥 Townsend said. 鈥淲e have to contact the city, and there鈥檚 this huge delay. They鈥檙e not on 24 hours. That鈥檚 part of the problem.鈥
Townsend said she鈥檇 prefer that OTS return to the previous Avaya network. While Wong called it obsolete, Townsend said it鈥檚 鈥渒nown in the country as one of the best dispatching system for paratransit.鈥
Currently, she said OTS and the city are in procurement for a vendor who might replace Handi-Van’s Trapeze software. The city has contracted with the company for Handi-Van dispatch software since 1998. Townsend said the software is costly to run and often requires expensive patches and upgrades on top of the base cost.
Its mapping system often sends the paratransit vans and their passengers well out of their way, she added.
OTS has dedicated staff trying to deliver service 鈥渨ith a crappy system,” she told riders at the C-FADAR meeting. A few minutes later, she apologized to the crowd for the comment. She added, however, that “I still believe it is.鈥
Trapeze officials did not respond to a request for comment last week.
So far in 2019, Handi-Van is up by nearly 16,000 rides, or 5.4 percent, Townsend said. It’d be nice if the service allowed some riders to book online or via smartphone, taking some of the strain off the reservation line.
鈥淭he frustration on my staff is high,” Townsend told the riders. 鈥淚鈥檓 amazed every day that we鈥檙e able to get you to where you need to go.鈥
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org