Dec 24 2002
Hasidic Jews fight for kosher bus charter
By CBC News Online staff
MONTREAL
(CBS News) - Montreal's Hasidic Jews are going to court to
fight for a bus service that caters to their specific needs.
This fall, Tov Travel, which for 30 years has
chartered buses for Hasidic Jews headed for New York, was shut
down.
The Quebec automobile insurance board seized
two of the small company's buses in October, without saying
exactly why.
The company, backed by hundreds of members of
Montreal's Hasidic community, went to court this week to get
the shuttles back on the road.
A lawyer for Tov Travel says the company provides
a service no other company can. Jordan Charness said the Hasidic
Jews have a list of requirements from separate seating for
men and women, to a dress code. No video, radio or non-kosher
food can be allowed on the bus.
But lawyers for two other bus companies, Greyhound
and Adirondack Trailways, say Tov Travel competes unfairly
by bending the rules and operating without a permit.
"We're quite prepared to meet any specific requirements
of this community and other communities," said David Blair,
a lawyer representing Greyhound. "We are in place as one of
the regulated carriers providing the service."
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