King County Keeps Moving: Evaluating
Best Practices in ADA Paratransit Eligibility
King County Metro in Seattle, Washington
has been recognized as a trend-setter and leading
innovator in the evolution of paratransit practices
and procedures. Faced with dramatic projected increases
in paratransit demand and costs, the agency implemented
significant refinements to their paratransit eligibility
procedures in November 2000. As a result of these
changes, it is estimated that new applicants are being
added to the registration rolls at half
the rate they would have been under the previous process,
and the agency is estimated to have saved $1.5 million
in trip reductions in 2002. In 2003 Metro conducted
a comprehensive evaluation of the effectiveness of
all aspects of the program, which is the core of this
paper.
Highlights of the eligibility program
evaluation include: effectiveness of a unique pre-application
process; 100% phone interviews with applicants; use
of a team of eligibility analysts with varying degrees
of expertise in the field; provision of a costly but
very effective travel training program (and how referrals
to the program occur); and effective collection of
information to allow implementation of trip-by-trip
eligibility screening.
The evaluation included two unusual methodologies
for assessing the impact of the eligibility program:
1) telephone interviews were conducted with individuals
who had expressed interest in applying but chose not
to after receiving the pre-application package, 2)
two hundred applications were reviewed by team of
three cross-discipline analysts who compared their
eligibility determinations to those of Metro and contract
staff, and made recommendations for program refinements.
In addition, the study team conducted a detailed cost/
benefit analysis, addressed issues related to the
use of health care professionals in the completion
of "non-medical" evaluations, and recommended a standard
for conditional eligibility.