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		App to help blind people navigate public transit to debut in Washington
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		 [May 24, 2022] By 
		David Shepardson 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An app designed to 
		help visually impaired or blind pedestrians use public transit will 
		debut at a Washington subway station on Tuesday.
 
 Waymap aims to expand travel options for blind and visually impaired 
		people with step-by-step audio directions that it says are accurate up 
		to 3 feet (0.9 meter) throughout a trip.
 
 The app does not use GPS and can operate regardless of cellphone signal 
		strength indoors or outdoors. It loads detailed mapping data onto a 
		smartphone and uses motion sensors on the phone to offer precise 
		directions.
 
 Advocates for the blind, Washington's transit system Metro, Verizon 
		Communications, which provided support through its start-up accelerator 
		program, and the app's founder will tout the launch in Washington at a 
		Tuesday news conference.
 
 "Mobility is not a luxury,” said Waymap founder and CEO Tom Pey, who is 
		blind and argues other apps are not precise enough. "It is, in fact, a 
		human right."
 
 Blind travelers often use a small number of routes from home because 
		they are relying on memory to get around and they lack confidence, Pey 
		said.
 
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			Commuters ride an escalator during the morning rush at the Metro 
			Center subway station in Washington, U.S. June 12, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
            
			
			
			 
            "Instead of 2.5 routes you can do 25 routes, 250 
			routes," Pey said. "This will allow more people to become more 
			independent - not to have to rely on family and friends - and use 
			public transport like everyone else."
 Waymap will be deployed in phases with the goal of deploying the app 
			at up to 30 Metro train stations and nearly 1,000 bus stops by 
			September and across the entire Metro system by early 2023.
 
 "It’s part of our mission to make Metro accessible to all people at 
			every walk of life," said Metro CFO Dennis Anosike.
 
 Pey hopes other people in Washington without visual disabilities 
			will eventually use the app to help refine directions and improve 
			the maps. "You're actually donating your steps to a blind person," 
			Pey said.
 
 (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Robert Birsel)
 
            
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