CabAbility team
Ahbid Choudry, second from left, founder of CabAbility, and other members of the team.
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CabAbility geared up for further expansion as popularity for its specialist taxi service grows 

2 mins read

A specialist taxi firm set up by for people with disabilities is driving forward at a rapid rate – with aspirations for national expansion. 

Ahbid Choudry, who was born with the degenerative condition spinal muscular atrophy, founded CabAbility to stop people suffering from the embarrassment he says he faced growing up. 

Starting with just two jobs in the first year of trading, the company has grown hugely. Ahbid now has 22 wheelchair accessible cars and minibuses with a fleet of drivers covering North Staffordshire and South Cheshire and more than 50 regular customers. 

The 43-year-old, who is in a wheelchair himself, said that while growing up in the 80s and 90s, he couldn’t do the things his friends and peers were doing socially, simply because he couldn’t get a taxi to transport him in his wheelchair.  

It was these experiences and his determination to make a difference that led to the creation of CabAbility in 2017. 

Ahbid, who comes from a family of taxi owners and lives in Shelton, Stoke-on-Trent, said: “Growing up, I experienced first-hand how difficult it was to get a taxi when you’re in a wheelchair. There was absolutely no dignity in it.  

“Taxi drivers wouldn’t come and get me because it would take too much time to get me in and out, which meant less time to do other jobs which they saw as costing them money.  

“And when I did manage to get a taxi, there would be times where my wheelchair wasn’t clamped in correctly which was just laziness on their part and dangerous for me. 

“I wanted to change that and give people with disabilities their dignity back. In an age where there is supposed to be equality, why should a person in a wheelchair have to wait in the rain for hours just to get home because they can’t get a taxi? 

“I went to New York around 16 years ago and over there calling for a taxi when you’re disabled was quick and easy – it was like having a 4th emergency service. I don’t understand why that’s not the case here, why isn’t providing an accessible transport system for all at the forefront of people’s minds?” 

He added: “I want us to make a difference to people’s lives and from the reviews we are getting I know that’s the case. It makes me and the team incredibly proud and humbled to see how we are helping make peoples’ lives that little bit easier.  

“I might have taken this line from the Batman movie but it’s true – we may not be the hero you want but we may be the hero you need.” 

All the company’s drivers are trained in how to strap different wheelchairs in safely and correctly which is essential when some wheelchairs can be as heavy as twenty stone. Drivers also have British Sign Language, autism and seizure training. 

He added: “I want to expand massively and would love the company to operate nationally. I want to leave a legacy and for me that legacy is CabAbility.”  

CabAbility is now gearing up for further success as it is in the running for the Business in the Community accolade at this year’s Staffordshire University Business Awards

Nigel Pye

Experienced journalist with a 30-year career in the newspaper and PR industry and a proven record for breaking stories for the national and international press. Nigel is the Editor of Daily Focus and Head of Creative at i-creation. Other work includes scriptwriting, magazine and video production, crisis communications and TV and radio broadcasts.

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