Cindy,
What in the world did you do to break your leg???????
jan

--- On Tue, 6/16/09, Cindy McLeroy <cindymcle...@socal.rr.com> wrote:






And Sandy, how do you like the yellow medal plates that are being installed at 
the curb cutouts?  Supposedly they are meant for the blind so that their sticks 
feel the different surface.  I haven't talked to a blind person, a w/c user, or 
a fellow pushing grocery carts that like the danged things.  Caster wheels get 
caught in between the bumps. This change was a lawsuit that back fired.
 
Version Amphitheater in Irvine  has done an amazing job of raising a portion of 
the seating above the orchestra section so folks in wheelchairs can see the 
stage when the rest of the people below are standing.  Love it there.
 
One of the ADA limits has to do with cost.  If the modification is too costly 
and the building can show that, then they don't have to modify.  Also, if the 
building is historic, they don't have to modify.  
 
Cindy (sitting home waiting for an otho doctor to get me in with a very severe 
broken leg...been to emergency already and had a splint)
 
----- Original Message ----- 

From: parkersw...@aol.com 
To: a...@artfarm.com ; tmic-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 2:44 PM
Subject: Re: [TMIC] Accessibility & Relationships


Add to the list of complaints:  Have you noticed that at many hotels, the ADA 
rooms are furthest from the elevators?  And yes, you are lucky if they have ADA 
rooms on the first floor.  Also, the rooms often face the parking 
lot and seldom the garden, pool or view?  Is this discrimination?  I feel it is.
 
At some commercial stores or restaurants we have had to get Terry through the 
kitchen or the back door to get to the bathroom. In one instance, we had to go 
two buildings down!   In passing, I mentioned this to a Civil Rights attorney I 
know and he said, "lawsuit".  We haven't pursued that, of course.  This friend 
has filed many suits against large hotel chains, music festivals, etc., as they 
are hardly ADA compliant.  He himself is disabled and knows first hand the 
discrimination.  I am not saying whatsoever that every place discriminates, not 
by a long shot.  But many business owners are not very aware of the 
disadvantages that people in wheelchairs are faced with.
 
That's my tangent for the day.  As a wife of a TM'er, if I have time tomorrow, 
I will try to address the relationship issue.   



Download the AOL Classifieds Toolbar for local deals at your fingertips.

Reply via email to