Sunday, June 17, 2012

From Boston: "The Day the MBTA Saved a Bunny and a Little Girl’s Heart," by Casey Carey-Brown


Each day before school, Roozle chooses a friend to go to school with her. Lately, she has been choosing Nummy, her very first stuffed animal bunny. Nummy is the first stuffed animal she ever had sleep in her crib with her. The first toy she named. A very good friend. Today, Nummy had a great day at school and just before the train arrived to pick us up at Stony Brook, Roozle told us that Nummy was a little scared of the train and she needed to tell her it was okay, trains aren’t scary. (Read more here.)

Sunday, June 10, 2012

From Vancouver: "Bus passengers pass the hat to help woman see dying mom on Vancouver Island," by Jane Seyd for the North Shore News


This story originally appeared on the Vancouver Sun website at this address:  http://www.vancouversun.com/passengers+pass+help+woman+dying+Vancouver+Island/6660185/story.html. This link no longer exists. A copy of the original story appears below.


A West Vancouver bus driver and passengers on an express bus to Horseshoe Bay are being hailed as Good Samaritans after they stepped up to get a woman to Nanaimo to see her dying mother on Mother's Day.

The bus was heading from downtown Vancouver to the Horseshoe Bay ferry last Sunday morning when an accident on the Lions Gate Bridge closed the bridge to traffic.

The driver had just announced to passengers that the bus would be rerouted over the Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing when he was approached by a woman asking if the bus would still make it in time for the 12:30 p.m. ferry to Nanaimo.

When the bus driver said he didn't think so, the woman "broke down in tears," said Gareth Rowlands, manager of the West Vancouver Blue Bus transit system. She told the driver she'd got a phone call saying her mother - who was in hospital in Nanaimo - likely only had a few hours to live. The woman told him she only had enough money to travel by ferry. Hearing that, another woman on the bus took up a collection from fellow passengers and managed to come up with enough money for the approximately $90 floatplane fare from Vancouver to Nanaimo.

The bus driver, an employee with 16 years' experience, then drove the bus to drop the woman off near to the floatplane base in Vancouver Harbour before continuing on to the Second Narrows.

Rowlands said he first heard about the incident when he heard bus drivers talking about it. The driver of the express bus gave the passengers full credit, he said.

"He said anybody else would have done the same thing. He was just glad that the lady stepped in to help," said Rowlands.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

From Portland, Oregon: "The Newbie" [a Top Ten Bus Stories nominee] by Bill Reagan via Trimet Diaries


The #4 is a different ride completely. Whenever I board, I’m shocked by the vibrancy and volume – bold conversations, often across multiple rows of passengers, with random interjections from other riders as if the talkers are crowdsourcing answers for the day’s dilemmas. It’s a raucous and lively experience, and many riders seem happy to perpetuate that. I always feel like an interloper on the #4. A very quiet interloper.

So I sympathized with the woman who apparently boarded the wrong bus, bringing her #4-style personality into the quiet confines of the #35.

(Read the whole story here.)