BART hosts safety orientation for blind and low-vision individuals

Feb. 2, 2023
The safety orientation is the first part of BART's engagement with the local blind and low-vision community, as the agency will host an online Town Hall on Feb. 28 to gather input on upcoming projects, and how BART can improve accessibility services.

Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) hosted a safety orientation for the blind and low-vision community to demonstrate how they can navigate the system on their own and welcome back riders with disabilities.

19th St. Oakland Station was packed with attendees -- many with walking canes or service dogs, some on wheelchairs -- who traversed the newly remodeled concourse and platform. One platform at the station was out of service for the event to house an out-of-service Fleet of the Future train. BART staff wearing bright yellow vests and jackets guided attendees inside the opened train cars and demonstrated where priority seating, wheelchair areas, emergency instructions and Braille signages are located.

An estimated 200 people attended the orientation, the first of its kind since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to BART Director of Access Robert Franklin.

"This is the first time we have demonstrated a new train," Franklin said. "All these people didn't know the BART system very well. This was a space where they could learn and explore where things are in a safe environment, in their own terms."

The idea to bring back this safety orientation emerged out of the 50th anniversary celebration BART hosted at Lake Merritt Station Plaza last September. At the event, Franklin began conversations with the San Francisco-based nonprofit, The Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, to reinstate the event and re-acquaint the blind and low-vision community with riding BART.

The 50th anniversary celebration also served as a direct inspiration for improving the orientation. A segment of BART tracks made for demonstration at the celebration was a hit among the blind and low-vision attendees, and Franklin worked with BART workers from the Tracks Department to build a similar mock-up for the orientation. The mock-up consists of the trackway and the refuge area underneath a station platform (built with plywood) to educate attendees how to react if they accidentally fall onto the trackway and cannot get up to the platform.

For Sheri Albers, the community outreach coordinator for The Lighthouse for the Blind, education about the refuge area is a life-saver -- including her own, after a scary experience where she nearly fell onto the trackway with a train pulling out of the station.

"Talking about it is one thing, and you can tell me about (where the refuge area is) until the cows come home, but I need to have my hands on it to get a real sense for it. I need to feel, if this happens to you, don't be afraid,” Albers said.

Most of the attendees came out through The Lighthouse and the Fremont-based California School for the Blind, but there was a tremendous interest in the event through word of mouth and social media, according to Albers. The Lighthouse brought its own materials to the event, including Braille maps of the BART system and of BART stations.

Attendees started coming into 19th St. Oakland Station a half-hour early and were eager for the event to start.

"It brought this community together," Franklin said.

The safety orientation is the first part of BART's engagement with the local blind and low-vision community. Following the orientation, BART staff will host an online Town Hall for the blind and low vision community on Feb. 28 to gather input on upcoming projects and to hear directly about how the agency can improve accessibility services. BART also has future plans to provide similar engagements with the deaf and hard-of-hearing community and the mobility impaired community.

BART continues to welcome back riders since the pandemic, and riders with disabilities make a significant portion who rely on BART as a lifeline to get around the Bay. Seven percent of BART's riders reportedly have a disability, which limit many to not be able to drive a car.

For Albers, who is low-vision herself, BART is her main mode of transport to travel from her East Bay home to San Francisco, where The Lighthouse is and anywhere she wants to go.

“BART is my way to get out and be independent and self-reliant," Albers said. "Information is powerful, and we want to ally the fear in our community of taking BART. Once you eliminate the fear, the world is in your hands."