More on this lady's experiences with a guide-dog in Carlisle
Visually-impaired Carlisle woman refused taxi service several times http://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/Visua ... 29bd9cb-dsLydia Hulme has spoken out to highlight the problemA visually-impaired woman who was refused two taxis in the same night because she has a guide dog has spoken out to highlight the problem.
Lydia Hulme was let down by two Carlisle taxi drivers when she was trying to get home on the evening of June 26 with her three-year-old Labradoodle Bertie.
But this wasn't her first experience.
The 26-year-old, from the city centre, can count at least six times when taxis have driven off or refused her, not just in Carlisle but across the UK, though there may have been times where she didn't notice.
She told the News & Star: "It's a big problem for guide dog owners. If taxi drivers drive off before you approach the rank, it's not technically a refusal because you have never reached the car so they can get away with it on the reliance the most guide dog owners don't have the level of vision to be able to read the license plate or describe the car accurately.
"It's an ongoing issue and taxi drivers do do it regularly.
"It's really difficult to approach a rank not knowing whether or not there will be a taxi there. If you know there is only one car at that rank and if that one drives off on you, which had happened to me on that night, it was then really difficult to walk round to the other rank and find that that taxi driver didn't want to take me either."
This time she reported how she had been treated. Dilwar Ali - the second driver Miss Hulme approached on June 26 - has had his Hackney carriage drivers license suspended for four weeks.
He failed to comply with a duty imposed by the Equality Act 2010, in which a taxi driver must carry the disabled person's dog and allow it to remain with that person.
When he came before the Carlisle City Council's regulatory panel on Wednesday, he told members it was the biggest mistake of his life. He also made personal apology to Miss Hulme.
"It did mean a lot. He thanked me, he said he was sorry again. I told him it was okay and that I hoped it will all go better for him when he gets his license back again in four weeks time. I look forward to seeing him again when he's out and about," she said.
"I think it was a really fair decision and he made it clear that he was very sorry for what had happened."
Generally though, she said the experience makes her feel like she's the one causing a problem.
"It's a really unfair feeling," she said, "when really all you are is just someone trying to go about their life in the same way a wheelchair user would be or a white cane user would be so it does make you feel like you're part of the problem."
Miss Hulme thinks the only way to combat the problem is to raise awareness of the issue and ensure those dealing with members of the public have the required information, training and understanding of guide dogs.
She added that taxi drivers in the past have complained that taking Bertie makes the car hairy and she's witnessed drivers making a big fuss to sweep the car clean.
"They make a really big point of the fact that you have got hair in their car and it's going to be a hassle for them or it's a problem for them or they've just had their car valeted," she said.
"It's a small price to pay to have a few hairs in your car to be able to drive."
"I hope that I don't come across the problem again in Carlisle."